Impact of family relocation on children's growth, development, school function, and behavior
D. Wood, N. Halfon, D. Scarlata, P. Newacheck and S. Nessim
Ahamanson Department of Pediatrics, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, CA 90048.
OBJECTIVE--The United States is a highly mobile society, with family
relocation rates double those of Great Britain and Germany. The objective
of this study was to describe the impact of frequent family moves on
reported rates of delay in growth or development, learning disorders,
school failure, and frequent behavioral problems in US school-age children.
DESIGN AND SETTING--We analyzed data on 9915 six- to 17-year-old children
of families responding to the 1988 National Health Interview Survey, a
nationally representative sample of families and children. OUTCOME
MEASURES--Parents were asked to report the total number of moves the index
child had experienced during his or her lifetime. Total moves were adjusted
for the child's age in years. Children were divided into two groups: never
moved/infrequent relocation (below the 90th percentile for age-adjusted
moves) and frequent relocation (above the 90th percentile for age-adjusted
moves). The parent was asked if the child had ever had a learning
disability or a delay in growth or development, had ever failed a grade, or
had four or more frequently occurring behavioral problems as described by a
behavioral problems checklist. RESULTS--The measures of both child
dysfunction and family relocation were independently associated with
multiple sociodemographic characteristics such as poverty, race, and family
structure. Frequent relocation was associated with higher rates of all
measures of child dysfunction; 23% of children who moved frequently had
repeated a grade vs 12% of children who never or infrequently moved.
Eighteen percent of children who moved frequently had four or more
behavioral problems vs 7% of children who never or infrequently moved. Use
of logistic regression to control for potential confounding covariates
demonstrated that children who moved frequently were 77% more likely to be
reported to have four or more behavioral problems (odds ratio, 1.77; 95%
confidence interval, 1.37 to 2.29) and were 35% more likely to have failed
a grade (odds ratio, 1.35; 95% confidence interval, 1.06 to 1.72), but no
more likely to have had delays in growth or development or a learning
disorder. CONCLUSIONS--After adjusting for other covariates, frequent
family relocation was associated with an increased risk of children failing
a grade in school and four or more frequently occurring behavioral
problems.
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