# Early Childhood Maltreatment and Profiles of Resilience

> **NIH NIH R03** · OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY · 2020 · $78,000

## Abstract

PROJECT SUMMARY
 Child maltreatment continues to be a serious public health concern, with approximately 700,000 victims
each year. Although maltreated children are at significant risk for negative developmental outcomes, some
maltreated children exhibit resilience, which is the process of positive adaptation and functioning in the face of
adverse life circumstances. Resilience during early childhood is particularly important because the basis of
core competence is formed during this period, making it a critical window of opportunity for promoting life-long
resilience; yet we know very little about how resilience operates in young maltreated children. Furthermore,
despite theoretical evidence that supports the multidimensionality of resilience, prior empirical research has
often employed a simple dichotomous view of resilient vs. non-resilient, failing to accurately describe the ways
in which resilience outcomes and processes may develop. Understanding different profiles of resilience
functioning (e.g., low resilience outcomes across all developmental domains; high cognitive functioning but low
social functioning) and identifying maltreatment characteristics and family ecology that distinguish variations in
resilience profiles are important new questions to move the field forward. The proposed research makes a
meaningful contribution to the fields of maltreatment and resilience research through the novel application of a
person-centered analytical approach in studying heterogeneity in resilience outcomes among young children.
Additionally, the study will identify maltreatment characteristics and family risk and protective factors that shape
the development of resilience during early childhood, offering valuable information for intervention development
and clinical practice. A secondary analysis will be conducted using the National Survey of Child and
Adolescent Well-Being (NSCAW-II) and The Early Childhood Longitudinal Study– Kindergarten Class of 2010-
11 (ECLS-K: 2011) to address three specific aims: (1) To identify distinct profiles of resilience across multiple
domains of functioning (cognitive, emotional, behavioral, social) among children in early childhood; (2) To
investigate concurrent and lagged relationships of maltreatment characteristics and family risk and protective
factors to resilience profiles; and (3) To determine to what extent resilience profiles at baseline remain stable or
change over time and examine how various maltreatment characteristics and family risk and protective factors
are related to transition patterns of resilience functioning over time. The study aims closely match the NICHD's
New Research Priorities to stimulate research to “promote psychosocial adjustment for individuals in high-risk
environments.” Further, the proposed study contributes to the NICHD's mission of “ensuring that all children
have the chance to achieve their full potential for healthy and productive lives” by identifying the most
vulnerable grou...

## Key facts

- **NIH application ID:** 9977602
- **Project number:** 1R03HD100603-01A1
- **Recipient organization:** OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY
- **Principal Investigator:** Susan H. Yoon
- **Activity code:** R03 (R01, R21, SBIR, etc.)
- **Funding institute:** NIH
- **Fiscal year:** 2020
- **Award amount:** $78,000
- **Award type:** 1
- **Project period:** 2020-05-15 → 2022-04-30

## Primary source

NIH RePORTER: https://reporter.nih.gov/project-details/9977602

## Citation

> US National Institutes of Health, RePORTER application 9977602, Early Childhood Maltreatment and Profiles of Resilience (1R03HD100603-01A1). Retrieved via AI Analytics 2026-05-23 from https://api.ai-analytics.org/grant/nih/9977602. Licensed CC0.

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