Christchurch Health and Development Study, Department of Psychological Medicine, University of Otago, P.O. Box 4345, Christchurch, 8140, New Zealand.
Soc Psychiatry Psychiatr Epidemiol. 2013 Mar;48(3):465-76. doi: 10.1007/s00127-012-0547-0. Epub 2012 Jul 5.
Drawing on prospective longitudinal data, this paper examines the intergenerational transmission of childhood conduct problems in a sample of 209 parents and their 331 biological offspring studied as part of the Christchurch Health and Developmental Study. The aims were to estimate the association between parental and offspring conduct problems and to examine the extent to which this association could be explained by (a) confounding social/family factors from the parent's childhood and (b) intervening factors reflecting parental behaviours and family functioning.
The same item set was used to assess childhood conduct problems in parents and offspring. Two approaches to data analysis (generalised estimating equation regression methods and latent variable structural equation modelling) were used to examine possible explanations of the intergenerational continuity in behaviour.
Regression analysis suggested that there was moderate intergenerational continuity (r = 0.23, p < 0.001) between parental and offspring conduct problems. This continuity was not explained by confounding factors but was partially mediated by parenting behaviours, particularly parental over-reactivity. Latent variable modelling designed to take account of non-observed common genetic and environmental factors underlying the continuities in problem behaviours across generations also suggested that parenting behaviour played a role in mediating the intergenerational transmission of conduct problems.
There is clear evidence of intergenerational continuity in conduct problems. In part this association reflects a causal chain process in which parental conduct problems are associated (directly or indirectly) with impaired parenting behaviours that in turn influence risks of conduct problems in offspring.
本研究利用前瞻性纵向数据,在基督城健康与发展研究中对 209 名父母及其 331 名亲生子女进行了研究,考察了儿童期品行问题在代际间的传递。目的是估计父母和子女品行问题之间的关联,并检验这种关联在多大程度上可以用(a)父母童年时期的混杂社会/家庭因素和(b)反映父母行为和家庭功能的干预因素来解释。
采用相同的项目集评估父母和子女的儿童期品行问题。采用广义估计方程回归方法和潜在变量结构方程模型两种数据分析方法,检验行为代际连续性的可能解释。
回归分析表明,父母和子女的品行问题之间存在中度的代际连续性(r=0.23,p<0.001)。这种连续性不能用混杂因素来解释,但部分可以通过父母教养行为来解释,特别是父母的过度反应。为了考虑潜在的共同遗传和环境因素对两代之间行为问题的连续性而设计的潜在变量模型也表明,父母教养行为在品行问题的代际传递中起着中介作用。
品行问题在代际间存在明显的连续性。部分原因是一种因果链过程,即父母的品行问题与不良的教养行为有关(直接或间接),而不良的教养行为反过来又影响子女品行问题的风险。