Effects of individual risk and state housing factors on adverse outcomes in a national sample of youth transitioning out of foster care.

Authors

Dana M. Prince, Sarah Vidal, Nathanael Okpych, Christian M. Connell.

Type
Journal Article
Year published
2019
Journal
Journal of Adolescence
Attachments
Document
Prince_2019.pdf (385.82 KB)
Title

Effects of individual risk and state housing factors on adverse outcomes in a national sample of youth transitioning out of foster care.

Volume and issue

74,

Abstract

"Compared to their peers, youth who leave the foster care system without permanency experience greater risks for adverse young adult outcomes, including homelessness, incarceration, substance abuse, and early child birth. Extant literature focuses on individual-level factors related to adversity. In this study, we estimated the impact of state and individual-level risk and protective factors on adverse 19-year-old outcomes among a cohort of U.S. transition age youth.
We used multilevel modeling to analyze prospective, longitudinal data from two waves of the National Youth in Transitions Database (N = 7449). These data were linked to the Adoption and Foster Care Reporting System, the Administration for Children and Families budget expenditures, and the American Community Survey for the period from 2011 to 2013."