Brittany R. Schuler’s research while affiliated with Temple University and other places

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Publications (24)


Digitalized Social and Emotional Learning and Better Wellbeing among Displaced Syrian Adolescents in Lebanon
  • Article

July 2024

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5 Reads

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3 Citations

International Journal of Mental Health

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Alaa Al-Khayat

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Brittany Schuler

Lower Perceived Neighborhood Collective Efficacy Indirectly Influences the Association Between Perceived Maternal Exposure to Community Violence and Household Food Insecurity

April 2024

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19 Reads

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1 Citation

Family & Community Health

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Brittany R Schuler

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[...]

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Background and Objectives Individuals of color and of low socioeconomic status are at greater risk of experiencing community violence and food insecurity, which are both influenced by neighborhood conditions. We evaluated neighborhood collective efficacy as a linkage between community violence exposure and household food insecurity. Methods Mothers from the Future of Families and Child Wellbeing Study who completed phone surveys when the child was 3 (time 1, T1) and 5 years old (time 2, T2) were included (n = 2068). A covariate-adjusted structural equation model estimated direct and indirect effects of community violence exposure on household food insecurity. A covariate-adjusted multiple mediator model estimated the indirect effects of the 2 neighborhood collective efficacy subscales (informal social control; social cohesion and trust). Results At T1, 40% of mothers reported community violence exposure; 15% experienced food insecurity at T2. Mean neighborhood collective efficacy (range 1-5) at T1 was 2.44 (SD = 0.94). Neighborhood collective efficacy indirectly influenced the association between community violence exposure and food insecurity (indirect effect = 0.022, 95% CI = 0.007 to 0.040). Only social cohesion and trust contributed independent variance to the indirect effect model (indirect effect = 0.028, 95% CI = 0.001 to 0.056). Conclusions Community-based efforts to reduce household food insecurity should emphasize building social cohesion and trust in communities experiencing violence.


Developmental Timing of Child Maltreatment in Relation to Obesity and Substance Use Disorder in Late Adolescence
  • Article
  • Publisher preview available

November 2023

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19 Reads

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2 Citations

Objective: Obesity and substance use are leading preventable causes of mortality, yet their origins in violence remain poorly understood. This study examined child maltreatment in relation to obesity and symptoms consistent with substance use disorder (SUD) in late adolescence, determining the roles of the child maltreatment type and timing, and gender. Method: The sample (N = 1,161) was drawn from the Longitudinal Studies of Child Abuse and Neglect. Obesity and SUD were measured at 18 years. Lifetime child protective services records and youth self-reports indicated physical abuse, sexual abuse, supervisory neglect, failure-to-provide neglect, and emotional maltreatment during early childhood, middle childhood, and adolescence. Results: In the overall sample, emotional maltreatment during adolescence was associated with obesity (OR = 2.03, 95% CI [1.25, 3.30]) and SUD (OR = 2.00, 95% CI [1.20, 3.35]), and adolescent physical abuse with obesity (OR = 2.20, 95% CI [1.36, 3.58]). In girls, early childhood physical abuse was associated with SUD (OR = 2.35, 95% CI [1.08, 5.12]), and emotional maltreatment during adolescence with obesity (OR = 2.16, 95% CI [1.10, 4.23]) and SUD (OR = 3.21, 95% CI [1.37, 7.3 5]). Adolescent physical abuse and obesity were associated in boys (OR = 3.18, 95% CI [1.45, 6.98]). Gender moderation was identified for an inverse relationship between supervisory neglect and obesity in girls (OR = .26, 95% CI [.07, .99]). Conclusions: Type and timing contribute to the effects of child maltreatment, contingent upon gender. Intervention focused on adolescent emotional maltreatment may reduce both SUD and obesity.

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Exploring the Association Between Trauma, Instability, and Youth Cardiometabolic Health Outcomes Over Three Years

October 2023

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11 Reads

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1 Citation

Journal of Adolescent Health

Purpose Childhood adversity plays a fundamental role in predicting youth cardiometabolic health. Our understanding of how adverse experiences in childhood should best be conceptualized remains elusive, based on one-dimensional measures of adversity. The present study fills a major gap in existing research by examining two distinct forms of threat and instability-related exposures that may impact cardiometabolic risk (CMR) in adolescence. Methods We explore two specific subtypes of adversity: trauma (e.g., badly hurt, victim of crime, loss of close person) and instability (e.g., moving, change of schools, change in household structure) as differential influences that can accumulate to impact early childhood onset of CMR (body mass index, high-density lipoprotein (HDL), low-density lipoprotein, diastolic and systolic blood pressure, triglycerides, C-reactive protein, insulin sensitivity). Secondary data were drawn from a randomized control behavioral trial of youth recruited during sixth grade from urban Cleveland (Ohio) schools beginning in 2012–2014 (n = 360) and followed for 3 years. Participants reported on 12 adverse experiences, six trauma- and six instability-specific. Multiple regression assessed effects of prospective and accumulative indices of trauma and instability with 3-year trajectories of eight objective CMR markers. Results Instability was associated with increased body mass index, decreased high-density lipoprotein, and increased C-reactive protein slopes. Trauma was associated with trends in triglyceride levels but not with any other CMR outcomes. Discussion Experiences with instability distinctly impacted adolescent CMR. Future research is needed to examine factors that can enhance stability for families in marginalized communities.


Moderated effects of Accumulated Dual WIC and SNAP Enrollment on change in FV Consumption Frequency across levels of INR from child ages 5 to 9 years.
Accumulation of WIC on Change in FV and SFAS Intake from Ages 5 to 9 Years (n = 733).
Accumulation of SNAP on Change in FV and SFAS Intake from Ages 5 to 9 Years (n = 733).
Accumulation of WIC and SNAP Dual Enrollment on Change in FV and SFAS Intake from Ages 5 to 9 Years (n = 733).
How Does Consistency of Food and Nutrition Support Effect Daily Food Consumption among Children Living in Poverty? Recession-Era Implications

December 2022

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86 Reads

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3 Citations

Underutilization of the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants and Children (WIC) and the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance (SNAP) food safety net programs may compromise child nutritional benefits for families with limited incomes. Using a sample of children surveyed before (2003–2006) and after the Great Recession (2007–2009), we examine whether consistent access to WIC and SNAP during times of increased economic stress moderated the association between poverty level (i.e., income-needs ratio [INR]) and fruits and vegetables (FV) or foods high in saturated fats and added sugars (SFAS). Fragile Families and Child Wellbeing Study income-eligible mothers/children (≤185% of poverty) with available FV and SFAS data at the 5- (2003–2006) and 9-year (2007–2010) waves (n = 733) were included. Main effects of INR and interaction effects of consistency of WIC, SNAP, and dual WIC and SNAP support from birth through age 5 were examined. INR was associated with decreased FV consumption frequency from age 5 to 9, conditional upon consistency of dual WIC/SNAP enrollment. FV declined when there was low consistency (<1 year) of dual support. FV consumption was stable across INR when combined WIC/SNAP support lasted at least 2 years. Results can inform strategies for optimizing the nutritional impact of WIC and SNAP by focusing on those most at risk for underutilization of multiple benefits.


Translating pediatric primary care best practice guidelines for addressing tobacco in the WIC system

November 2022

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6 Reads

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2 Citations

Translational Behavioral Medicine

Tobacco smoke exposure (TSE) adversely affects child health. Intervention research on reducing childhood TSE and uptake of evidence-based smoking cessation programs has had limited reach in high-risk communities. Intervening in clinics delivering the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children (WIC) could address overlapping public health priorities essential for healthy child development—nutrition and smoke-free environments. The Babies Living Safe and Smokefree (BLiSS) trial addresses existing gaps by implementing and evaluating a WIC in-clinic evidence-based training based on Ask, Advise, and Refer (AAR) guidelines. WIC nutrition staff (n = 67) completed surveys pre- and post-training as part of the larger BLiSS trial. Staff sociodemographic data, knowledge, and attitudes about maternal smoking and child TSE prevention, and AAR practices in clinic were collected using self-administered surveys. Pre–post outcomes were assessed using bivariate statistics and multiple regression models. Controlling for baseline AAR-related practices and other covariates, nutrition managers were more likely to engage in post-training AAR practices than nutrition assistants. Sociodemographics and smoking status were not related to post-training AAR. Lower perceived barriers and higher reported frequency of tobacco intervention practices at baseline were associated with higher engagement in post-test AAR practices. WIC-system interventions aimed at reducing child TSE and maternal tobacco smoking may be more effective if nutrition management-level staff are involved in assessment and by addressing barriers related to TSE among nutrition assistants. Findings suggest that WIC in-clinic training may help to increase self-efficacy for staff engagement in brief screening, intervention, and referral practices.


Lessons Learned from Conducting Health Behavior Research in an Under-Resourced, Urban Community

November 2022

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13 Reads

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1 Citation

Health Behavior Research

Existing literature discusses challenges in conducting community-engaged health behavior interventions. However, discussions associated with the barriers to executing community-engaged health behavior research with vulnerable populations are limited in the literature. This current issue provides lessons learned for the purpose of improving community-engaged research within communities that are under- resourced. The lessons learned stem from challenges with the recruitment and enrollment procedures and study design with a previous qualitative community-engaged research project. The research recommendations proposed are geared toward students preparing to engage in dissertation research and early-stage investigators who are interested in conducting research in under-resourced communities.


From Childhood Obesity Risk to Healthy Growth in the U.S.: A 10-Year Social Work Research & Policy Update

November 2022

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34 Reads

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4 Citations

Preventive Medicine Reports

Childhood obesity is a major health issue and a prominent chronic health condition for children in the United States (U.S.), caused by a multitude of factors. Most existing models of childhood obesity prevention have not worked, yielding little to no effect on improving weight status or the proximal health behaviors most attributed to obesity risk: nutritional intake, physical activity, sedentary behaviors, and sleep. There is an urgent need for new approaches to prevent health disparities that are responsive to impacts of economic inequality on healthy child growth in marginalized populations. In this Short Commentary, a social justice update is provided to motivate a new generation of research that promotes equitable and healthy child growth under present-day social, economic, and political circumstances. Social work-specific research and policy recommendations are provided to guide future research that targets underlying social and economic determinants of weight-related health disparities in childhood. Recommendations include research on cross-disciplinary metrics to better capture reductions in health disparities and the development and testing of policy and system interventions that address structural issues and strengthen health resources in marginalized communities. Progress in reducing disparities in childhood obesity will likely remain inhibited until recommendations from social work research are incorporated to strengthen existing medical and public health models and redirect the childhood obesity epidemic toward equitable, healthy child growth.


A latent class analysis to identify socio-economic and health risk profiles among mothers of young children predicting longitudinal risk of food insecurity

August 2022

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20 Reads

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5 Citations

Background The purpose of the current study was to use a social determinants of health (SDOH) framework and latent class analysis (LCA) to identify risk classes among mothers with young children. The risk classes were then used to predict food insecurity severity and stability/change of food insecurity over time. Method The secondary data from the Fragile Families and Child Wellbeing Study (n = 2,368; oversampled for non-marital births) was used in this study. Household food insecurity was assessed using the 18-items USDA Food Security Survey. A seventeen-item inventory of educational, economic stability, incarceration (i.e. social context), neighborhood safety (i.e. neighborhood and built environment), health and health care, and substance use behaviors at baseline/Year-1 were included to identify SDOH risk indicators in the LCA. Covariate-adjusted multinomial logistic regression models were used to examine the relation between risk classes at Year-1 and the severity of food insecurity at Year-3 and stability/change of food insecurity between Year-3 and Year -5. Results LCA identified five risk classes: High utility and medical hardship (Class 1), high housing and employment hardship, high substance use, and incarceration (Class 2), high housing and medical hardship, poor health, and health care (Class 3), high employment hardship and low-income (Class 4) and low-risk (Class 5). The Class 1, Class 2 and Class 3 had greater odds of low food security and very low food security at Year-3 compared to Class 4. In addition, compared to Class 4, Class 1, Class 2 and Class 3 had greater odds unstable food insecurity and persistent food insecurity over time. Conclusions LCA could be used to identify distinctive family system risk profiles predictive of food insecurity. The generated risk profiles could be used by health care providers as an additional tool to identify families in need for resources to ensure household food security.


Fig. 1. Path model tested in MPLUS. Notes. Adversity type-i = 1 Interpersonal, 2 Family, Economic, 4 Community Race, Age, Education are time invariant (baseline) convariates.
Indicators of adversity subtype exposure measures by respondent. a .
Sample characteristics and descriptive statistics for baseline sample N = 2412.
Path analysis results: Adversity types and BMIz, ages 3 through 9 (N = 2,412, fully adjusted estimates).
Path analysis results: Paths of prior and inter-adversity.
Adversity and child body mass index in Fragile Families over 15 years: Do type and timing matter?

August 2022

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53 Reads

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7 Citations

SSM - Population Health

Background Weight status has been linked to adverse childhood experiences. Existing research, however, is limited to unidimensional assessments of cumulative risk and does not account for the complex nature of adversity experienced by children in high-risk settings. We fill existing gaps by assessing how four subtypes of adversity across two primary dimensions of threat and deprivation-based adversity are associated with changes in body mass index (BMI) across child ages 3 through 15 years. Method U.S. mothers and fathers (n = 2412) in the Fragile Families and Child Wellbeing Study were interviewed when children were born, and again at ages 1, 3, 5, 9, and 15 years. Independent variables include interpersonal (e.g., domestic violence), family (e.g., mental health), economic (e.g., housing insecurity), and community (e.g., witness/victim of violence) adversity from ages 1 through 9 years. Path analysis regressed changes in BMIz from ages 3 through 15 on past adversity exposures. Results Increased interpersonal and community adversity subtypes from ages 3 to 5 were associated with decreased BMIz from ages 5–9 years. Increased economic adversity from age 3 to 5 was associated with increased BMIz from ages 5 to 9, adjusted for mother age, race, and education. Conclusion Findings highlight the differential influence of past adversity type and timing on child BMI. Interpersonal and community adversity were associated with decreased BMIz, and economic adversity with increased BMIz. Differences in directionality of associations suggest research should capture multiple dimensions of adversity in early childhood and possible positive and negative trends in effects on child weight as children grow from early to mid-childhood.


Citations (19)


... That is, it is possible that something about experiencing high general levels of psychopathology could cause an increased risk for cardiometabolic health problems later in adulthood. Nonetheless, the results do not exclude the possibility that the association between the general factor of psychological problems and health is attributable to influences not shared by the siblings (33). Because analyses of full siblings only hold half of their polymorphic genetic variation constant, this means that both genetic influences and environmental factors typically not shared by siblings, such as traumatic events, could explain the association between psychological and cardiometabolic problems. ...

Reference:

Why Psychological Problems Presage Cardiometabolic Health Problems
Exploring the Association Between Trauma, Instability, and Youth Cardiometabolic Health Outcomes Over Three Years

Journal of Adolescent Health

... Improving linkages across separate systems of care could overcome the challenges of multiple service needs and barriers to program access, engagement, and effectiveness if not better address interacting multilevel barriers that undermine the impact of social services in underserved communities. Existing research in healthcare settings found that creating coordinated systems of care to connect patients across community-based and social service assistance programs can help to increase service access and improve health and mental health outcomes [14][15][16], demonstrating how attending to fundamental social needs could help to moderate socioeconomic-driven disparities [17]. Understanding the perspectives of health and mental health professionals working within one system network of community agencies serving low-income children and families can provide important information on the common underlying socioeconomic drivers of disparity or equity in child physical and mental health development, information that is not currently well documented. ...

How Does Consistency of Food and Nutrition Support Effect Daily Food Consumption among Children Living in Poverty? Recession-Era Implications

... Moreover, most families in under-resourced communities require multiple services that no single system or agency provides. Most existing approaches are fragmented and geared towards changing individuals' behaviors, placing responsibility on the parent or child to follow up with referrals and use isolated downstream approaches (i.e., focus of responsibility is on micro individual change) rather than midstream (i.e., change in a community or group) and upstream, (i.e., macro or system level) approaches that address underlying drivers of health disparities [13]. ...

From Childhood Obesity Risk to Healthy Growth in the U.S.: A 10-Year Social Work Research & Policy Update

Preventive Medicine Reports

... In addressing the unique and elevated challenges to health behavior promotion in racially/ethnically diverse and economically disadvantaged populations, multilevel ecological approaches can overcome the limitations of standard treatments [65]. For example, a novel multilevel intervention for low-income maternal smokers initiated in urban clinics delivering the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants and Children (WIC) was designed to improve cessation treatment access, engagement, and effectiveness by combining a brief tobacco screening and advice and referral intervention delivered by WIC nutrition professionals with a 12-week, multimodal telehealth-based intervention modeled after Quitline infrastructure and designed to address individual-and home-level determinants of smoking [66]. This multilevel intervention was superior to standard care in promoting long-term bioverified tobacco abstinence [67] and provides a translatable multilevel approach to addressing complex health behaviors in low-income communities by combining a trusted low-income community clinic-based, systems-level intervention with a wider reaching and more comprehensive telehealth intervention. ...

Translating pediatric primary care best practice guidelines for addressing tobacco in the WIC system
  • Citing Article
  • November 2022

Translational Behavioral Medicine

... Understanding and responding to the challenges specific to these settings is an important step towards health equity. In addition to building on the challenges, lessons learned, and recommendations discussed here, researchers are encouraged to disseminate (via publications) more challenges and lessons learned regarding program development and implementation, especially among studies with nonsignificant findings (Kirk et al., 2022). ...

Lessons Learned from Conducting Health Behavior Research in an Under-Resourced, Urban Community

Health Behavior Research

... Addressing the determinants of food insecurity is one approach to reducing these 2 negative health outcomes. While previous research has focused on various social determinants of health as risk factors to food insecurity (Banks et al., 2021;Daundasekara et al., 2022;Hernandez, 2015;Norris et al., 2023), there has been comparatively less emphasis on modifiable behaviors, such as the role of self-efficacy. As defined by the Social Cognitive Theory, self-efficacy is a person's confidence in their capacity to carry out particular behaviors (Bandura, 2004). ...

A latent class analysis to identify socio-economic and health risk profiles among mothers of young children predicting longitudinal risk of food insecurity

... In the US, longitudinal studies have demonstrated a positive association of household FI (46), high cumulative social risk (including FI) (47), and economic adversity (income, FI, debt, and housing insecurity) (48) with increases in BMI scores over time in children. On the other hand, in a context where the population involved in the research received financial support from government agencies to cope with FI, Huang et al. found no association between increased BMI and FI in economically vulnerable adolescents in Taiwan. ...

Adversity and child body mass index in Fragile Families over 15 years: Do type and timing matter?

SSM - Population Health

... To the best of our knowledge, only one study has examined the links between different types of child maltreatment and the dimensions of peer-relationship quality. Using a sample of 1003 adolescents at risk for maltreatment, Kobulsky et al. (2022) found that those with sexual abuse experiences at age 16 were less likely to have peer companionship and intimacy in their peer relationships at age 18. This study did not find any significant effects of physical or emotional abuse on peer relationship quality. ...

Neglect, Abuse, and Adaptive Functioning: Food Security and Housing Stability as Protective Factors for Adolescents

... Another study evaluated "Brave Online," a clinician-guided, CBT-based toolkit focused on youth anxiety symptoms via a non-controlled trial involving youth who had lived through earthquakes in New Zealand; the researchers found that the intervention was associated with reductions in anxiety disorder diagnoses, anxiety symptoms, mood symptoms, and improvements in quality of life from pre-to posttreatment 29 . Yet only one study evaluated a DMHI for youths affected by war 30 . Specifically, in a single-arm trial with 125 Syrian adolescent refugees in Lebanon, the researchers evaluated a toolkit called "Happy Helping Hand" with simulations intended to help build coping skills in a series of lifelike scenarios related to trauma or stressful experiences (e.g., war, displacement); the intervention was associated with significant improvement in anxiety and depression, as well as increases in well-being from pre-to post-treatment, but this study was not an RCT 30 . ...

Does group size and blending matter? Impact of a digital mental health game implemented with refugees in various settings
  • Citing Article
  • February 2022

International Journal of Migration, Health and Social Care

... Twelve studies reported on the experiences of family violence and food insecurity among a female population (Barreto et al., 2019;Brandhorst & Clark, 2022;Chilton & Booth, 2007;Chilton et al., 2014Chilton et al., , 2017Daundasekara et al., 2022;Hernandez et al., 2014;Hunt et al., 2019;Laraia et al., 2022;Melchior et al., 2009;Power, 2006;Ricks et al., 2016), nine of these studies were based in the USA, two in Canada, and one in the UK. Five studies that focused on a female population specifically were longitudinal, four were qualitative, two were cross sectional, and one was a case study. ...

Independent and combined associations of intimate partner violence and food insecurity on maternal depression and generalized anxiety disorder
  • Citing Article
  • January 2022

Journal of Anxiety Disorders