Biological and psychological protective factors against the intergenerational transmission of criminal convictions: A total population, sibling comparison study

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Bibliographic Details
Title: Biological and psychological protective factors against the intergenerational transmission of criminal convictions: A total population, sibling comparison study
Authors: Oskarsson, Sofi, 1989, Tuvblad, Catherine, 1968, Lichtenstein, Paul, Larsson, Henrik, 1975, Latvala, Antti
Source: Development and psychopathology (Print). :1-9
Subject Terms: biological factors, cognitive ability, crime, intergenerational transmission, protective factors, psychological factors, psychological functioning, resting heart rate, systolic blood pressure, violence
Description: Parental criminality is a risk factor for crime, but little is known about why some individuals exposed to this risk refrain from crime. We explored associations of resting heart rate (RHR), systolic blood pressure (SBP), cognitive ability (CA), and psychological functioning (PF) with criminal convictions among men with a convicted parent, accounting for unmeasured familial factors in sibling analyses. Data were         obtained from Swedish registers, including all men born in Sweden between 1958 and 1992 with a convicted parent (N = 495,109), followed for up to 48 years. The potential protective factors were measured at mandatory conscription. Outcomes were conviction of any, violent, and nonviolent crime. Survival analyses were used to test for associations, adjusting for measured covariates and unmeasured familial factors. Higher levels of RHR, SBP, CA, and PF were associated with reduced risk of criminality after adjusting for covariates. RHR associations were largely explained by familial factors. CA and PF associations were not due to sibling-shared confounders, in line with a causal interpretation. SBP results, indicating a protective effect against non-violent crime, warrant further investigation.
File Description: print
Access URL: https://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:oru:diva-122944
https://doi.org/10.1017/s0954579425100515
Database: SwePub
Description
Abstract:Parental criminality is a risk factor for crime, but little is known about why some individuals exposed to this risk refrain from crime. We explored associations of resting heart rate (RHR), systolic blood pressure (SBP), cognitive ability (CA), and psychological functioning (PF) with criminal convictions among men with a convicted parent, accounting for unmeasured familial factors in sibling analyses. Data were         obtained from Swedish registers, including all men born in Sweden between 1958 and 1992 with a convicted parent (N = 495,109), followed for up to 48 years. The potential protective factors were measured at mandatory conscription. Outcomes were conviction of any, violent, and nonviolent crime. Survival analyses were used to test for associations, adjusting for measured covariates and unmeasured familial factors. Higher levels of RHR, SBP, CA, and PF were associated with reduced risk of criminality after adjusting for covariates. RHR associations were largely explained by familial factors. CA and PF associations were not due to sibling-shared confounders, in line with a causal interpretation. SBP results, indicating a protective effect against non-violent crime, warrant further investigation.
ISSN:09545794
DOI:10.1017/s0954579425100515