Why do prospective and retrospective measures of childhood maltreatment differ? Qualitative analyses in a cohort study
Coleman O, Baldwin J, Moffitt T, Arseneault L, Fisher H, Rose-Clarke K, Danese A. Why do prospective and retrospective measures of childhood maltreatment differ? Qualitative analyses in a cohort study. Child Abuse & Neglect 2024, 157: 107070. PMID: 39366249, DOI: 10.1016/j.chiabu.2024.107070.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeasures of maltreatmentInterview notesSelf-reportRetrospective measuresEnvironmental Risk Longitudinal Twin StudyAged 5Accuracy of self-reportProspective measuresCategories of themesMaltreatmentFramework analysisCaregiver interviewsChildhood maltreatmentChildhood experiencesCohort studyLongitudinal Twin StudyQualitative dataInterviewsTwin studiesChildhood Trauma QuestionnaireGroup of individualsParticipantsTrauma QuestionnaireSource of disagreementQualitative analysisResearch Review: Why do prospective and retrospective measures of maltreatment differ? A narrative review
Coleman O, Baldwin J, Dalgleish T, Rose‐Clarke K, Widom C, Danese A. Research Review: Why do prospective and retrospective measures of maltreatment differ? A narrative review. Journal Of Child Psychology And Psychiatry 2024, 65: 1662-1677. PMID: 39150090, DOI: 10.1111/jcpp.14048.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeasures of maltreatmentChildhood maltreatmentRetrospective measuresMeasures of childhood maltreatmentMental health burdenReports of maltreatmentRetrospective reportsMaltreatmentAssess maltreatmentPsychopathologyGroup of individualsNovel interventionsMethodological issuesHealth burdenData collection methodsMotivating individualsMeasure disagreementIndividualsMulti-disciplinary researchMemoryCollection methods