Alfredsson Elin K, Broberg Anders G
Department of Psychology, University of Gothenburg, Gothenburg, Sweden.
Scand J Psychol. 2016 Apr;57(2):177-84. doi: 10.1111/sjop.12278.
Leader-led parent support groups, offered universally to parents of adolescents, are increasingly common, yet little is known of the parents who use this support. The study presented here explored the characteristics of parents of 10- to 17-year-olds (N = 192) who had enlisted in universal support groups and their reasons for enrollment. Sociodemographic factors (parents' country of origin, educational level, long-term sick-leave or unemployment, and marital status) were compared to the general population (Statistics Sweden, 2012) and parents' psychological health and children's psychiatric symptoms were compared to a control group (the BITA study). Results showed that support group parents reported more psychosocial difficulties, such as higher frequency of long-term sick-leave or unemployment, more symptoms of anxiety and depression and more psychiatric symptoms in their children than parents in general. While about a fifth of the parents had problem-oriented (targeted) reasons for enrollment, most parents had general (universal) reasons. Thus, the universal approach does seem to reach its intended recipients.
为青少年父母普遍提供的由领导者主导的家长支持小组越来越常见,但对于使用这种支持的家长却知之甚少。本文介绍的研究探讨了加入普遍支持小组的10至17岁孩子的家长(N = 192)的特征及其加入的原因。将社会人口统计学因素(家长的原籍国、教育水平、长期病假或失业情况以及婚姻状况)与普通人群(瑞典统计局,2012年)进行了比较,并将家长的心理健康状况和孩子的精神症状与一个对照组(BITA研究)进行了比较。结果显示,与普通家长相比,支持小组的家长报告了更多的心理社会困难,例如长期病假或失业的频率更高、焦虑和抑郁症状更多以及孩子的精神症状更多。虽然约五分之一的家长有以问题为导向(针对性)的加入原因,但大多数家长有一般(普遍)原因。因此,这种普遍方法似乎确实覆盖到了其目标受众。