Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Denise L. Haynie is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Denise L. Haynie.


Journal of Early Adolescence | 2001

Bullies, Victims, and Bully/Victims: Distinct Groups of At-Risk Youth

Denise L. Haynie; Tonja R. Nansel; Patricia Eitel; Aria Davis Crump; Keith E. Saylor; Kai Yu; Bruce G. Simons-Morton

Bullying and victimization are prevalent problems in the area of adolescent peer relationships. Middle school students (N = 4,263) in one Maryland school district completed surveys covering a range of problem behaviors and psychosocial variables. Overall,30.9% of the students reported being victimized three or more times in the past year and 7.4% reported bullying three or more times over the past year. More than one half of the bullies also reported being victimized. Those bully/victims were found to score less favorably than either bullies or victims on all the measured psychosocial and behavioral variables. Results of a discriminant function analysis demonstrated that a group of psychosocial and behavioral predictors—including problem behaviors, attitudes toward deviance, peer influences, depressive symptoms, school-related functioning, and parenting—formed a linear separation between the comparison group (never bullied or victimized), the victim group, the bully group, and the bully/victim group.


Health Education & Behavior | 2001

Peer and Parent Influences on Smoking and Drinking among Early Adolescents

Bruce G. Simons-Morton; Denise L. Haynie; Aria Davis Crump; Patricia Eitel; Keith E. Saylor

Social influences can promote or discourage adolescent substance use. The authors surveyed 4,263 sixth- to eighth-grade students to assess the effect of peer and parent influences on adolescent substance use. The authors conducted separate multiple logistic regression analyses for smoking and drinking, controlling for grade, sex, and race. Positive independent associations with smoking and drinking were found for direct peer pressure and associating with problem-behaving friends. Independent negative associations with smoking and drinking were also found for parent involvement, parent expectations, and parent regard. In an analysis of interactions, peer pressure was positively associated with drinking for girls but not for boys and problem-behaving friends was positively associated with drinking for both boys and girls. The findings are consistent with the hypothesis that associating with deviant peers promotes and that authoritative parenting protects against smoking and drinking.


Journal of Developmental and Behavioral Pediatrics | 2006

Self-efficacy, Outcome Expectations, and Diabetes Self-management in Adolescents with Type 1 Diabetes

Ronald J. Iannotti; Stefan Schneider; Tonja R. Nansel; Denise L. Haynie; Leslie P. Plotnick; Loretta M. Clark; Douglas O. Sobel; Bruce G. Simons-Morton

ABSTRACT. The goal of this research was to develop and evaluate measures of adolescent diabetes management self-efficacy and outcome expectations that reflect developmentally relevant, situation-specific challenges to current diabetes regimens. Self-efficacy for diabetes management, expected outcomes of adherence, adherence to the diabetes regimen, and glycemic control were assessed in 168 adolescents (ages10-16 years) with type 1 diabetes. Factor analyses indicated a single scale for self-efficacy and two distinct factors representing positive and negative outcome expectations. Reliability and predictive validity of the new scales were supported. In regression analyses, self-efficacy and the interaction of self-efficacy with expectations of positive outcomes were significantly associated with diabetes self-management adherence and glycemic control in older adolescents. The effect of self-efficacy was greatest when adolescents had stronger beliefs in the beneficial outcomes of adherence. These brief measures can be used to identify youths at risk of poor diabetes self-management. Interventions targeting self-efficacy may lead to improved diabetes self-management.


Journal of Adolescent Research | 2000

CAN I TAKE THE CAR? RELATIONS AMONG PARENTING PRACTICES AND ADOLESCENT PROBLEM-DRIVING PRACTICES

Jessica L. Hartos; Patricia Eitel; Denise L. Haynie; Bruce G. Simons-Morton

The goal of this study was to examine relations among problem-driving practices and parenting practices. Three hundred adolescents licensed 2 years or less were interviewed about driving behaviors, parenting practices, and orientations toward deviance. Factors significantly related to risky driving behaviors, traffic violations, and motor vehicle crashes included lower levels of parental monitoring and control, and lenient parental restrictions on driving (i.e., friends as passengers and driving curfews). Parental monitoring was among the subset of variables most useful in predicting risky driving behaviors. Violations were 4 times more likely with lenient restrictions related to frequency of friends as passengers and 2 times more likely with low parental control. Crashes were 7 times more likely with lenient restrictions related to frequency of friends as passengers. Overall, the findings suggest that adolescent problem driving is related to parenting practices.


Injury Control and Safety Promotion | 2004

The role of supervision in child injury risk: definition, conceptual and measurement issues

Gitanjali Saluja; Ruth A. Brenner; Barbara A. Morrongiello; Denise L. Haynie; Michelle Rivera; Tina L. Cheng

The purpose of this paper was to examine caregiver supervision and its role as an active strategy in childhood injury prevention. Through a review of the literature, the authors addressed conceptual and methodological issues related to supervision, such as the question of how to define ‘adequate supervision.’ Three critical dimensions (attention, proximity and continuity) of caregiver supervisory behaviors are identified as important areas for measurement. Presented is a framework for understanding the role of passive and active supervisory behaviors within the social context. The framework includes family and community characteristics and policies/regulations that may be important in caregiver decisions to use active or passive injury prevention strategies. Future research directions are discussed.


Journal of Applied School Psychology | 2003

The Association of Bullying and Victimization with Middle School Adjustment

Tonja R. Nansel; Denise L. Haynie; Bruce G. Simons-Morton

ABSTRACT Bullying others or being victimized during the transition to middle school may be an important risk factor for school adjustment problems; however, it has been minimally addressed in previous research. This study examined the relationship of bullying and being victimized during the first year of middle school with subsequent school adjustment. Self-report data were obtained from 930 youth at the beginning of 6th grade, the end of 6th grade, and the end of 7th grade. After controlling for baseline scores, youth who were classified as bullies, victims, or bully-victims during sixth grade showed poorer school adjustment than their non-involved peers. In addition, those who were victims or bully-victims during 6th grade reported a more negative perceived school climate than bullies or comparison youth. These differences persisted over time. Findings suggest that problematic peer interactions may hinder youths adaptation to the middle school environment.


Health Psychology | 2004

Latent growth curve analyses of peer and parent influences on smoking progression among early adolescents

Bruce G. Simons-Morton; Rusan Chen; Lorien Abroms; Denise L. Haynie

Social influences on smoking uptake were examined in latent growth curve analyses of data from 1,320 youths assessed 5 times during 6th to 9th grade. Initial smoking stage predicted increases in number of friends who smoked, indicating selection; however, initial number of friends who smoked did not predict smoking stage progression, indicating no significant effect of socialization. Associations over time among smoking stage progression, affiliation with friends who smoke, and parenting behaviors were significant, suggesting dynamic, reciprocal relationships. Parental involvement, monitoring, and expectations provided direct protective effects against smoking progression as well as indirect effects, by limiting increases in number of friends who smoke. These results are consistent with the peer selection hypothesis, confirm the powerful association over time of social influences with smoking, and provide the first evidence that parenting behavior may protect against smoking progression by limiting increases in number of friends who smoke.


Journal of Developmental and Behavioral Pediatrics | 1992

Friendship in adolescence

James Youniss; Denise L. Haynie

This article reviews current theory and research on adolescent friendship and offers a framework in which friendship is developmentally characterized by reciprocity, co-construction and consensual validation. Three areas of research are reviewed: (1) the relative influence of parents and peers, (2) popularity among peers, and (3) gender differences in friendship. These conclusions are drawn: (1) although peer influence increases during adolescence, parents remain strong socializing agents throughout adolescence; (2) popularity status is associated with social behavior. These behaviors are related to differential developmental outcomes for adolescents; (3) studies on the socialization of gender need to take into account the cultural context and historical changes in male-female distinctions. After years of neglect, social scientists have found friendship to be an important vehicle for psychological and psychiatric development. For example, a promising new development is the use of peer interaction as a therapeutic tool for troubled adolescents. J Dev Behav Pediatr 13:59–66, 1992. Index terms: friendship, adolescence, peer relations.


Journal of Adolescent Health | 2013

Dating Violence Perpetration and Victimization Among U.S. Adolescents: Prevalence, Patterns, and Associations With Health Complaints and Substance Use

Denise L. Haynie; Tilda Farhat; Ashley Brooks-Russell; Jing Wang; Brittney Barbieri; Ronald J. Iannotti

PURPOSE This research identified conceptually cohesive latent classes of youth dating violence (DV) and examined associations between covariates and classes by gender. METHODS A nationally representative sample of 2,203 10th grade students completed assessments of physical and verbal DV victimization and perpetration, depressive symptoms, health complaints, and substance use. A Factor Mixture Model was used to identify patterns of DV. Gender differences among classes were examined for depressive symptoms, health complaints, and substance use. RESULTS Prevalence of DV victimization was 35% and perpetration was 31%. A three-class model fit adequately and provided conceptual cohesion: Class 1 = non-involved (65%); Class 2 = victims/perpetrators of verbal DV (30%); and Class 3 = victims/perpetrators of verbal and physical DV (5%). Compared with Class 1 adolescents, those in Classes 2 and 3 were more likely to report depressive symptoms, psychological complaints, and alcohol use. Females in Classes 2 and 3 were also more likely to report physical complaints, cigarette use, and marijuana use. Among females involved in DV, those in Class 3 compared with Class 2 reported more depressive symptoms, physical and psychological complaints, and cigarette and marijuana use. CONCLUSIONS The three-class model distinguished involvement in verbal acts from involvement in verbal and physical acts. Adolescents involved in DV had similar probabilities of reporting perpetration and victimization, suggesting violence within relationships may be mutual. Involvement in DV was associated with more health issues and concurrent problem behaviors. For females in particular, the increased involvement in DV was associated with other health indicators.


Addictive Behaviors | 1999

Expectancies and other psychosocial factors associated with alcohol use among early adolescent boys and girls

Bruce G. Simons-Morton; Denise L. Haynie; Aria Davis Crump; Keith E. Saylor; Patricia Eitel; Kai Yu

Early experimentation with drinking increases the lifetime risk for substance abuse and other serious health and social problems. We studied factors associated with early alcohol experimentation by surveying 4,263 sixth- to eighth-grade students (67.1% White, 23.5% Black, 7.2% other races combined; 2.2% missing data) from seven schools in one suburban school district. The prevalence of drinking in the last 30 days was 12.1% for boys and 13.1% for girls (12.6% overall); 6.6% among sixth graders, 11.1% among seventh graders, and 19.5% among eighth graders. In multiple logistic regression analyses, controlling for grade, positive alcohol expectancies, perceived prevalence, and deviance acceptance were associated positively, self-control negatively, with drinking for both boys and girls. Among boys, grade point average was negatively associated with drinking. Among girls, propensity for risk-taking and problem-behaving friends were positively associated and high parental expectations were negatively associated with drinking. Alcohol use in our sample of early adolescent boys and girls was better explained by modifiable psychosocial factors such as alcohol expectancies, perceived prevalence, and self-control than by grade.

Collaboration


Dive into the Denise L. Haynie's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Tonja R. Nansel

National Institutes of Health

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Leah M. Lipsky

National Institutes of Health

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Danping Liu

National Institutes of Health

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Tina L. Cheng

Johns Hopkins University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Kaigang Li

Colorado State University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jeremy W. Luk

National Institutes of Health

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge