Kelley Michelle L, French Alexis, Schroeder Valarie, Bountress Kaitlin, Fals-Stewart William, Steer Kate, Cooke Cathy G
Old Dominion University, Norfolk, Virginia 23529-0267, USA.
Subst Use Misuse. 2008;43(11):1559-70. doi: 10.1080/10826080802240906.
This 2005 study compared parent-child attachment in 89 American female Adult Children of Alcoholics (ACOAs) as compared to 201 non-ACOAs. Women attended a large university in the southeastern United States. Participants categorized as ACOA on the Children of Alcoholics Screen Test (CAST; Jones, 1983) reported significantly more negative affect and less support from their fathers as indicated on the Parental Attachment Questionnaire (Kenney, 1987). When results were examined by the gender of the alcohol-abusing(1) parent, participants who suspected their fathers were problem drinkers did not differ from non-ACOAs in their attachment to either parent. As compared to non-ACOAs, women who self-identified as daughters of problem-drinking mothers reported poorer attachment both to mothers and fathers.
这项2005年的研究比较了89名美国成年女性酗酒者子女(ACOA)与201名非酗酒者子女的亲子依恋情况。这些女性就读于美国东南部的一所大型大学。在酒精成瘾者子女筛查测试(CAST;琼斯,1983年)中被归类为ACOA的参与者,在父母依恋问卷(肯尼,1987年)中报告称,她们的负面影响明显更多,来自父亲的支持更少。当按酗酒父母的性别来分析结果时,怀疑父亲是酗酒者的参与者在与父母的依恋关系上与非ACOA没有差异。与非ACOA相比,自认为是酗酒母亲女儿的女性报告称与母亲和父亲的依恋关系都较差。