Van Loon L M A, Van De Ven M O M, Van Doesum K T M, Hosman C M H, Witteman C L M
Behavioural Science Institute, Radboud University Nijmegen, P.O. Box 9104, 6500 HE Nijmegen, The Netherlands.
Behavioural Science Institute, Radboud University Nijmegen, P.O. Box 9104, 6500 HE Nijmegen, The Netherlands ; Community Mental Health Centre Dimence, Deventer, The Netherlands.
Child Youth Care Forum. 2015;44(6):777-799. doi: 10.1007/s10566-015-9304-3. Epub 2015 Feb 7.
Children of parents with mental illness have an elevated risk of developing a range of mental health and psychosocial problems. Yet many of these children remain mentally healthy.
The present study aimed to get insight into factors that protect these children from developing internalizing and externalizing problems.
Several possible individual, parent-child, and family protective factors were examined cross-sectionally and longitudinally in a sample of 112 adolescents. A control group of 122 adolescents whose parents have no mental illness was included to explore whether the protective factors were different between adolescents with and without a parent with mental illness.
Cross-sectional analyses revealed that high self-esteem and low use of passive coping strategies were related to fewer internalizing and externalizing problems. Greater self-disclosure was related to fewer internalizing problems and more parental monitoring was related to fewer externalizing problems. Active coping strategies, parental support, and family factors such as cohesion were unrelated to adolescent problem behavior. Longitudinal analyses showed that active coping, parental monitoring, and self-disclosure were protective against developing internalizing problems 2 years later. We found no protective factors for externalizing problems. Moderation analyses showed that the relationships between possible protective factors and adolescent problem behavior were not different for adolescents with and without a parent with mental illness.
The findings suggest that adolescents' active coping strategies and parent-child communication may be promising factors to focus on in interventions aimed at preventing the development of internalizing problems by adolescents who have a parent with mental illness.
父母患有精神疾病的儿童出现一系列心理健康和社会心理问题的风险较高。然而,这些儿童中的许多人仍保持心理健康。
本研究旨在深入了解保护这些儿童不出现内化和外化问题的因素。
对112名青少年样本进行了横断面和纵向研究,考察了几种可能的个体、亲子和家庭保护因素。纳入了122名父母无精神疾病的青少年作为对照组,以探讨有或没有患精神疾病父母的青少年之间保护因素是否存在差异。
横断面分析显示,高自尊和较少使用消极应对策略与较少的内化和外化问题相关。更多的自我表露与较少的内化问题相关,更多的父母监督与较少的外化问题相关。积极应对策略、父母支持以及家庭凝聚力等家庭因素与青少年问题行为无关。纵向分析表明,积极应对、父母监督和自我表露对两年后出现内化问题具有保护作用。我们未发现外化问题的保护因素。调节分析表明,对于有或没有患精神疾病父母的青少年,可能的保护因素与青少年问题行为之间的关系并无差异。
研究结果表明,青少年的积极应对策略和亲子沟通可能是旨在预防父母患有精神疾病的青少年出现内化问题的干预措施中值得关注的因素。