Grandparent Deaths and Severe Maternal Reaction in the Etiology of Adolescent Psychopathology

Relationships between the extent of psychopathology and the occurrence of 21 major life events during five developmental periods (prebirth, infancy, childhood, latency, and adolescence) were examined with multiple regression and x2 analyses for 114 hospitalized male and female adolescents. Psychopat...

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Veröffentlicht in:The journal of nervous and mental disease 1989-11, Vol.177 (11), p.675-680
Hauptverfasser: YATES, BRIAN T, FULLERTON, CAROL S, GOODRICH, WELLS, HEINSSEN, ROBERT K, FRIEDMAN, ROGER S, BUTLER, VICTORIA L, HOOVER, SHARON W
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Relationships between the extent of psychopathology and the occurrence of 21 major life events during five developmental periods (prebirth, infancy, childhood, latency, and adolescence) were examined with multiple regression and x2 analyses for 114 hospitalized male and female adolescents. Psychopathology was assessed with the Global Assessment Scale (GAS) at admission to long-term residential treatment in a private psychiatric hospital. Data on deaths, physical illnesses, psychological disturbances, and socioenvironmental events experienced by patients before admission were gleaned from interviews and institutional records. Life events and GAS were scored independently. Only deaths and socioenvironmental events were significantly associated with psychopathology. Specifically, deaths of grandparents during infancy corresponded to lower functioning at admission. Additional analyses showed that severe reactions of patientsʼ mothers to grandparent deaths had been more common among those adolescents who were most disturbed at the time they were admitted to the hospital. These findings were largely serendipitous, however, and need replication.
ISSN:0022-3018
1539-736X
DOI:10.1097/00005053-198911000-00003