School of Applied Psychology and Griffith Health Institute, Griffith University, Mt Gravatt, Queensland, Australia.
J Anxiety Disord. 2012 Oct;26(7):737-45. doi: 10.1016/j.janxdis.2012.06.002. Epub 2012 Jun 23.
A considerable body of research has identified various child and parent factors that contribute to and maintain anxiety symptoms in children. Yet relatively few studies have examined child factors (including threat-based cognitive bias, neuroticism, gender, puberty and age) as well as parent factors (including maternal anxiety and child-rearing style) in association with child anxiety symptoms, and the extent to which these factors serve as unique predictors of child anxiety. Moreover, research is lacking on whether parent factors such as child-rearing style, which is often targeted in early intervention and treatment programs, might mediate the association between child factors such as neuroticism, and child anxiety symptoms. In a sample of 85 children between 7 and 12 years of age with varying levels of anxiety, including those with diagnosed anxiety disorders, results showed that children were more anxious when they were reported to be more advanced in pubertal status by their parents, when they had a tendency to interpret more threat in ambiguous situations, and when they self-reported more neuroticism. Regarding parent factors, maternal self-reported trait anxiety and children's perceptions of their mother as having an anxious child-rearing style were associated with higher levels of child anxiety. Moreover, when these correlates of child anxiety were examined in a multivariate model to identify those that had direct as well as indirect associations via maternal anxious child-rearing style, child neuroticism remained as a significant and unique predictor of child anxiety that was also mediated by maternal anxious-rearing. Child neuroticism also mediated the relationship between child pubertal stage and anxiety symptoms. Results are discussed in terms of relevant theory and empirical evidence regarding the roles of both child and parent factors in the development of child anxiety.
大量研究已经确定了各种儿童和父母因素,这些因素有助于维持儿童的焦虑症状。然而,相对较少的研究同时考察了儿童因素(包括基于威胁的认知偏差、神经质、性别、青春期和年龄)和父母因素(包括母亲焦虑和育儿风格)与儿童焦虑症状的关系,以及这些因素作为儿童焦虑的独特预测因子的程度。此外,缺乏关于父母因素(如育儿风格)的研究,育儿风格通常是早期干预和治疗计划的目标,它是否可能在神经质等儿童因素与儿童焦虑症状之间起中介作用。在一个包括不同焦虑水平的 85 名 7 至 12 岁儿童的样本中,包括那些被诊断为焦虑障碍的儿童,结果表明,当父母报告孩子的青春期发育程度更高、当他们在模棱两可的情况下更倾向于解释更多威胁、当他们自我报告更多神经质时,他们会更焦虑。关于父母因素,母亲自我报告的特质焦虑和孩子对母亲有焦虑育儿风格的看法与孩子更高的焦虑水平有关。此外,当这些儿童焦虑的相关因素在多元模型中被用来确定那些通过母亲焦虑育儿风格有直接和间接关联的因素时,儿童神经质仍然是儿童焦虑的一个显著和独特的预测因子,并且也受到母亲焦虑育儿的中介作用。儿童神经质也中介了儿童青春期阶段和焦虑症状之间的关系。研究结果从相关理论和实证证据的角度讨论了儿童和父母因素在儿童焦虑发展中的作用。