MRC Social, Genetic and Developmental Psychiatry Centre, King's College London, London, United Kingdom; Department of Psychology, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
J Adolesc Health. 2013 Oct;53(4 Suppl):S4-10. doi: 10.1016/j.jadohealth.2013.04.007.
To identify contextual and interpersonal factors that distinguish families in which the intergenerational transmission of maltreatment is maintained from families in which the cycle is broken.
The sample was composed of 1,116 families in the United Kingdom who participated in the Environmental Risk (E-Risk) Longitudinal Twin Study. We assessed mother's childhood history of maltreatment retrospectively with a validated and reliable interview. Prospective reports of children's physical maltreatment were collected repeatedly up to 12 years. We compared families in which mothers but not children had experienced maltreatment with families in which both mothers and children had experienced maltreatment, and with families without maltreatment, on a range of contextual and interpersonal factors known to affect child development.
In multivariate analyses, supportive and trusting relationships with intimate partners, high levels of maternal warmth toward children, and low levels of partner violence between adults distinguished families in which mothers but not children experienced maltreatment from families in which mothers and children experienced maltreatment. Families in which only mothers experienced maltreatment were largely similar to families in which neither generation experienced maltreatment, except that mothers belonging to the former group were more likely to have a lifetime history of depression and low levels of social support.
Safe, stable, nurturing relationships between intimate partners and between mothers and children are associated with breaking the cycle of abuse in families. Additional research is needed to determine whether these factors have a causal role in preventing the transmission of maltreatment from one generation to the next.
确定区分代际虐待传递持续的家庭和打破这种循环的家庭的情境和人际因素。
该样本由 1116 个英国家庭组成,他们参加了环境风险(E-Risk)纵向双胞胎研究。我们使用经过验证和可靠的访谈,回顾性地评估了母亲童年时期遭受虐待的经历。儿童身体虐待的前瞻性报告被反复收集,最多可达 12 年。我们将仅母亲经历过虐待的家庭与母亲和孩子都经历过虐待的家庭以及没有虐待的家庭进行比较,比较了一系列已知会影响儿童发展的情境和人际因素。
在多变量分析中,与亲密伴侣的支持和信任关系、母亲对孩子的高度温暖以及成人之间的低伴侣暴力水平,将仅母亲经历过虐待的家庭与母亲和孩子都经历过虐待的家庭区分开来。仅母亲经历过虐待的家庭与两代人都未经历过虐待的家庭基本相似,只是前者的母亲更有可能有终生抑郁史和低水平的社会支持。
亲密伴侣之间以及母亲和孩子之间安全、稳定、养育关系与打破家庭虐待循环有关。需要进一步研究这些因素是否在防止虐待从一代传递到下一代方面具有因果作用。