Relationships between parental mental illness and/or offending and offspring contact with the police in childhood: Findings from a longitudinal record‐linkage study

Author:

Athanassiou Ulrika1ORCID,Green Melissa J.12,Tzoumakis Stacy3,Whitten Tyson14,Laurens Kristin R.15,Harris Felicity1,Carr Vaughan J.126,Dean Kimberlie17

Affiliation:

1. Discipline of Psychiatry and Mental Health School of Clinical Medicine University of New South Wales Sydney NSW Australia

2. Neuroscience Research Australia Sydney NSW Australia

3. School of Criminology and Criminal Justice Griffith University Southport QLD Australia

4. Center for Law and Justice Charles Sturt University Port Macquarie NSW Australia

5. School of Psychology and Counselling Queensland University of Technology (QUT) Brisbane QLD Australia

6. Department of Psychiatry Monash University Melbourne VIC Australia

7. Justice Health and Forensic Mental Health Network Matraville NSW Australia

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundParental offending and mental illness are associated with an increased risk of criminal behaviour in offspring during adolescence and adulthood, but the impact of such problems on younger children, including children's experiences of victimisation, is less well known.AimTo investigate the associations between parental offending and mental illness recorded prior to their offspring's age of 5 years and their offspring's contact with police as a ‘person of interest’, ‘victim’ or ‘witness’ between ages 5 and 13 years.MethodsOur sample consisted of 72,771 children and their parents drawn from the New South Wales Child Development Study, an Australian longitudinal population‐based record linkage study. Logistic regression analyses were conducted to examine associations between parental factors and offspring's police contact. Separate models examined the relationships between maternal or paternal offending and mental illness, as well as the combination among either or both parents, as the independent variables, and their child's police contact as the dependent variable.ResultsParental offending and mental illness were each individually associated with indices of police contact among offspring. Stronger associations were observed when both offending and mental illness were present together (in either parent, or when one parent had both exposures). Stronger associations were evident for mothers with both factors across all offspring police contact types, relative to fathers with both factors, in fully adjusted models; that is, children of mothers with both factors were over four times as likely to have contact with police as a ‘person of interest’ (OR = 4.29; 95% CI = 3.75–4.92) and over three times as likely to have contact as a victim (OR = 3.35; 95% CI = 3.01–3.74) or witness (OR = 3.58; 95% CI = 3.03–4.24), than children whose mothers had no history of offending or mental illness.ConclusionsChildren with a parental history of offending and mental illness in early life are at an increased likelihood of early police contact as young as 5–13 years of age; it is vital that this is taken as a signal to help them and their affected families according to need.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health,Psychology (miscellaneous),General Medicine,Pathology and Forensic Medicine

Reference48 articles.

1. Examining the overlap of young people’s early contact with the police as a person of interest and victim or witness

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3. Australian Government. (2011).Census of population and housing: Socio‐economic indexes for areas (SEIFA). Retrieved fromhttps://www.abs.gov.au/ausstats/abs@.nsf/mf/2033.0.55.001d

4. The Familial Concentration and Transmission of Crime

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