Sunday Suzanne, Labruna Victor, Kaplan Sandra, Pelcovitz David, Newman Jennifer, Salzinger Suzanne
Department of Psychiatry, North Shore University Hospital/The Zucker Hillside Hospital, The North Shore-Long Island Jewish Medical Center, 400 Community Drive, Manhasset, NY, USA.
Child Abuse Negl. 2008 Jan;32(1):5-18. doi: 10.1016/j.chiabu.2007.03.025. Epub 2007 Dec 20.
To examine the relationship between physical abuse of adolescents and parenting by mothers and fathers and whether the association differs by gender.
Subjects were adolescents, 51 girls and 45 boys, documented by Child Protective Services (CPS) as physically abused during adolescence. Comparison subjects were non-abused adolescents, 47 girls and 48 boys, from the same suburban communities. Subjects completed the following: Family Adaptability and Cohesion Evaluation Scale, Parental Bonding Instrument, modified Conflict Tactics Scale (assessing physical abuse/punishment by each parent).
Although CPS generally cited fathers as the abuse perpetrators, abused boys and girls often reported experiencing physical maltreatment from both parents. Not surprisingly, comparison subjects rated parents more positively than abused subjects. For both groups, mothers were perceived as more caring and less controlling, were reported to have closer relationships with their adolescents, and were less likely to use abuse/harsh punishment than were fathers. Differences between the adolescents' perceptions of mothers and fathers were more pronounced for abused than for comparison subjects. Boys' and girls' perceptions of parenting were generally similar except that girls, especially the abused girls, reported feeling less close to fathers. Abused girls also viewed mothers as less caring than the other groups viewed mothers. Abused girls were also less likely than abused boys to perceive that either parent, but particularly fathers, had provided them with an optimum style of parenting.
Adolescents who experienced relatively mild physical abuse reported dysfunctional family relationships, which may place them at risk of poor adult outcomes. Adolescents' reports suggest that CPS reports may underestimate physical maltreatment by mothers.
探讨青少年遭受身体虐待与父母养育方式之间的关系,以及这种关联是否因性别而异。
研究对象为青少年,其中51名女孩和45名男孩,被儿童保护服务机构(CPS)记录为在青春期遭受过身体虐待。对照组为来自同一郊区社区的未受虐待青少年,47名女孩和48名男孩。研究对象完成了以下测评:家庭适应性和凝聚力评估量表、父母教养方式问卷、修订版冲突策略量表(评估每位父母的身体虐待/惩罚行为)。
尽管CPS通常将父亲列为虐待实施者,但受虐待的男孩和女孩经常报告称遭受过父母双方的身体虐待。不出所料,对照组对父母的评价比受虐待组更积极。对于两组而言,青少年认为母亲更有爱心、控制欲更弱,与青少年的关系更亲密,且比父亲更不太可能使用虐待/严厉惩罚。与对照组相比,受虐待青少年对母亲和父亲的看法差异更为明显。男孩和女孩对父母养育方式的看法总体相似,只是女孩,尤其是受虐待的女孩,报告称与父亲的关系没那么亲密。受虐待女孩还认为母亲不如其他组的人认为的那样有爱心。受虐待女孩也比受虐待男孩更不太可能认为父母,尤其是父亲,为他们提供了最佳的养育方式。
经历过相对轻微身体虐待的青少年报告称家庭关系失调,这可能使他们面临成年后不良后果的风险。青少年的报告表明,CPS的报告可能低估了母亲的身体虐待行为。