This paper examines the effects of living in a
stepfamily during childhood and adolescence
on a range of psychosocial outcomes at age 18 years. Data collected during
an 18-year
longitudinal study were used to examine a sample of 907 children with respect
to: exposure
to living in a stepfamily during the period from age 6 to 16 years; measures
of psychosocial
outcomes including mental health, antisocial behaviour, substance use,
restricted life
opportunities, and sexual risk-taking at age 18 years; and measures of
prospectively
collected confounding factors. The analyses revealed that children exposed
to living in a
stepfamily for the first time between ages 6–16 years had elevated
risks of a range of
psychosocial outcomes at 18 years. These included elevated risks of: (1)
juvenile offending;
(2) nicotine dependence; (3) abuse or dependence on illicit substances;
(4) leaving school
without qualifications; (5) early onset of sexual activity; and (6) multiple
sexual partners.
However, these risks were reduced substantially when psychosocial outcomes
were adjusted
for the confounding effects of antecedent factors such as: family socioeconomic
characteristics;
family history of instability, adversity, and conflict; mother's age,
religiosity, and
smoking; child gender; and preexisting child conduct and attentional problems.
After
adjustment, the odds ratios between exposure to a stepfamily and adolescent
outcomes were
nonsignificant. Additional analysis revealed that there were no significant
differences in
outcomes for boys and girls exposed to stepfamilies. It was concluded that
although young
people exposed to living in a stepfamily had increased risks of poor psychosocial
outcomes,
much of this association appeared to be spurious, and arose from confounding
social,
contextual, and individual factors that were present prior to the formation
of the stepfamily.