Published online June 1, 2006
PEDIATRICS Vol. 117 No. 6 June 2006, pp. e1124-e1131 (doi:10.1542/peds.2005-1913)
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Social Capital, Family Violence, and Neglect

Adam J. Zolotor, MD, MPHa and Desmond K. Runyan, MD, DrPHb

a Departments of Family Medicine
b Social Medicine and Pediatrics, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, North Carolina

BACKGROUND. Social capital includes collective efficacy, psychological sense of community, neighborhood cohesion, and parental investment in the child. It has been shown to be associated with a variety of health and welfare outcomes and may be useful in understanding and preventing parenting behaviors on the continuum of child abuse and neglect.

OBJECTIVE. The purpose of this research was to evaluate low social capital as a risk factor for harsh physical punishment, neglectful parenting, psychologically harsh parenting, and domestic violence.

METHODS. This study is an analysis of cross-sectional telephone survey data of mothers in North and South Carolina (n = 1435). We constructed a 4-point social capital index reflecting survey responses to items ascertaining neighborhood characteristics, willingness to take personal action, the presence of 2 adults in the household, and regular religious service participation. We assessed the relationship of social capital to inventories of self-reported parenting behaviors and in-home violence.

RESULTS. In adjusted analysis, we found that each 1 point increase in a 4-point social capital index was associated with a 30% reduction in the odds of neglectful parenting, psychologically harsh parenting, and domestic violence. There was no relationship between social capital and harsh physical punishment.

CONCLUSIONS. This study demonstrates that increasing social capital decreases the odds of neglectful parenting, psychologically harsh parenting, and domestic violence but not harsh physical punishment. This supports further investigation into developing social capital as a resource for families.


Key Words: child maltreatment • child abuse • social capital • social-environmental risk • parenting

Abbreviations: PCCTS—Parent Child-Conflict Tactics Scale • OR—odds ratio • CI—confidence interval


Accepted Dec 22, 2005.




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Home page
BRIEF TREAT CRISIS INTERVENHome page
A. J. Zolotor, A. D. Theodore, T. Coyne-Beasley, and D. K. Runyan
Intimate Partner Violence and Child Maltreatment: Overlapping Risk
Brief. Treat. Crisis Interven., November 1, 2007; 7(4): 305 - 321.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]