Pittman Joe F, Buckley Rhonda R
Department of Human Development and Family Studies, 203 Spidle Hall, Auburn University, Auburn, AL 36849, USA.
Child Abuse Negl. 2006 May;30(5):481-96. doi: 10.1016/j.chiabu.2004.10.017. Epub 2006 May 12.
This study compared perceptions of personal distress, interpersonal and marital problems, and aspects of family climate of maltreating fathers and mothers.
Subjects were 2841 offenders (1918 of whom were fathers or father-figures) who were identified and treated by the USAF Family Advocacy Program between 1988 and 1996. Independent variables for the analysis were parent sex (mother vs. father) as well as type and severity of maltreatment, history of repeat offenses, and history of abuse in childhood.
Maltreating mothers were more distressed and reported more problems from individuals outside the family than maltreating fathers; fathers reported more rigid expectations for children, less cohesive families, and less organized families than did maltreating mothers. Regardless of parental sex, victimization in the family of origin was related to distress and unhappiness. Similarly, both victimization in the family of origin and history of repeated offenses were powerful predictors of a more negative family climate regardless of the offending parent's sex. No significant statistical interactions between parental sex and other independent variables were found when predicting personal and interpersonal distress, marital problems, or family climate.
Studies rarely examine maltreating fathers except in the context of sexual abuse. Fewer still compare maltreating mothers and fathers. This study identified meaningful, though generally small, differences between maltreating mothers and fathers. Patterns suggest that maltreating mothers may tend to cope more poorly with personal distress, whereas maltreating fathers tend to operate in a family climate that is both distant and rigid, while holding inappropriate expectations for children's behavior. The absence of interactions between parental sex and the other independent variables included in the analysis indicate that these patterns do not vary by the history of victimization in the family of origin, the type or severity of child maltreatment, or the history of prior maltreatment in the family.
本研究比较了虐待儿童的父亲和母亲在个人困扰、人际关系及婚姻问题以及家庭氛围方面的认知。
研究对象为2841名犯罪者(其中1918名是父亲或扮演父亲角色的人),他们在1988年至1996年间被美国空军家庭咨询项目识别并接受治疗。分析的自变量包括父母性别(母亲与父亲)、虐待类型及严重程度、重复犯罪史以及童年受虐史。
与虐待儿童的父亲相比,虐待儿童的母亲更苦恼,且报告来自家庭外个体的问题更多;与虐待儿童的母亲相比,父亲对孩子的期望更刻板,家庭凝聚力更低,家庭组织性更差。无论父母性别如何,原生家庭中的受害经历都与苦恼和不幸福相关。同样,无论犯罪父母的性别如何,原生家庭中的受害经历和重复犯罪史都是家庭氛围更消极的有力预测因素。在预测个人和人际困扰、婚姻问题或家庭氛围时,未发现父母性别与其他自变量之间存在显著的统计交互作用。
除了在性虐待背景下,很少有研究考察虐待儿童的父亲。更少的研究比较虐待儿童的母亲和父亲。本研究发现了虐待儿童的母亲和父亲之间虽普遍较小但有意义的差异。模式表明,虐待儿童的母亲可能往往更难以应对个人困扰,而虐待儿童的父亲往往在一个疏远且刻板的家庭氛围中运作,同时对孩子的行为抱有不恰当的期望。分析中父母性别与其他自变量之间不存在交互作用,这表明这些模式不会因原生家庭中的受害史、儿童虐待的类型或严重程度,或家庭中先前虐待的历史而有所不同。