Disqualifying Family Communication and Childhood Social Competence as Predictors of Offspring's Mental Health and HospitalizationA 10- to 14-Year Longitudinal Study of Children at Risk of Psychopathology
作者:
WICHSTRØM1 LARS,
ANDERSON2 ANN,
HOLTE3 ARNE,
WYNNE4 LYMAN,
期刊:
The Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease
(OVID Available online 1996)
卷期:
Volume 184,
issue 10
页码: 581-588
ISSN:0022-3018
年代: 1996
出版商: OVID
数据来源: OVID
摘要:
Forty-nine families from the University of Rochester Child and Family Study were followed up 10 to 14 years after initial assessment. Two inclusion criteria were applied: at least one of the parents had been hospitalized for a functional psychiatric disorder before initial assessment and, second, the male index offspring should be 18 years or older at follow-up. Initial measures included observationally based coding of the family's level of disqualifying communication toward the index offspring, index child's scores on the Child Manifest Anxiety Scale, and ratings of the index child's social competence carried out by peers, teachers, and parents. Offspring outcome was measured by the Mental Health Inventory, Global Assessment Scale (GAS), and hospitalization for psychiatric disorder. The results showed that every measure of offspring outcome was predicted by the amount of disqualification directed to the offspring from the other family members. In addition, GAS score and mental health were predicted by the offspring's competence as a child. Family disqualification, childhood competence, and socioeconomic status accounted for 63% of the variance in adult GAS scores.
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