Ecology of Abusive and Nonabusive Families Implications for Intervention

The authors compare family interaction in 70 child abuse cases and 70 nonabuse psychiatric outpatient cases. The children were matched for age level (3–6, 6–12, and 12–17 years), sex, and primary diagnostic impression. Specific parameters focused on within each family included chronic situational st...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of the American Academy of Child Psychiatry 1979, Vol.18 (1), p.67-75
Hauptverfasser: Serrano, Alberto C., Zuelzer, Margot B., Howe, Don D., Reposa, Richard E.
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container_title Journal of the American Academy of Child Psychiatry
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creator Serrano, Alberto C.
Zuelzer, Margot B.
Howe, Don D.
Reposa, Richard E.
description The authors compare family interaction in 70 child abuse cases and 70 nonabuse psychiatric outpatient cases. The children were matched for age level (3–6, 6–12, and 12–17 years), sex, and primary diagnostic impression. Specific parameters focused on within each family included chronic situational stress, income level, mobility, previous psychiatric treatment, family conflict, husband-wife conflict, divorce, family resources, parent-child interaction, and underlying contributory factors with the parent and/or child. Abusive families were uniformly found to show a higher degree of pathology along the same parameters compared with controls. The significance of treating abusive families in the context of social systems is discussed.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/S0002-7138(09)60478-7
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source MEDLINE; EZB-FREE-00999 freely available EZB journals; Alma/SFX Local Collection; Journals@Ovid Complete
subjects Adolescent
Child
Child Abuse
Child, Preschool
Family Therapy - methods
Female
Humans
Male
Parent-Child Relations
title Ecology of Abusive and Nonabusive Families Implications for Intervention
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