Fogleman Nicholas D, Leaberry Kirsten D, Rosen Paul J, Walerius Danielle M, Slaughter Kelly E
Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, University of Louisville, 317 Life Sciences, Louisville, KY, 40292, USA.
Atten Defic Hyperact Disord. 2018 Sep;10(3):209-222. doi: 10.1007/s12402-018-0248-y. Epub 2018 Jan 12.
The current study explored the concurrent and longitudinal association between internalizing behaviors, externalizing behaviors, and peer victimization among children with and without ADHD. Eighty children (42 ADHD, 38 non-ADHD) ages 8-12 participated in the present study conducted over a 6-month period. During the baseline session, parents completed a structured diagnostic interview and the Vanderbilt ADHD Parent Rating Scale to determine whether their child met criteria for ADHD, and the Child Behavior Checklist (CBCL) to assess their child's internalizing and externalizing behaviors; children completed the Perception of Peer Support Scale (PPSS) to assess experiences of peer victimization. At the 6-month follow-up session, parents completed the CBCL and children completed the PPSS. Concurrently, internalizing behaviors were associated with peer victimization among children with and without ADHD; ADHD moderated this relation, such that internalizing behaviors were more strongly related to peer victimization among children with ADHD. Longitudinally, internalizing behaviors at baseline predicted peer victimization at 6-month follow-up; however, further analyses demonstrated there was a covarying change in internalizing behaviors and peer victimization. These findings suggest internalizing behaviors are related to peer victimization concurrently, and over time, and are associated with increased risk for peer victimization in the presence of ADHD. Additionally, internalizing behaviors and peer victimization appear to share a dynamic relationship; that is, decreases in internalizing behaviors predict similar decreases in peer victimization. No significant relations were observed between externalizing behaviors and peer victimization. Implications and limitations are discussed.
本研究探讨了患有和未患有注意力缺陷多动障碍(ADHD)的儿童的内化行为、外化行为与同伴受害之间的并发关系和纵向关联。80名年龄在8至12岁的儿童(42名患有ADHD,38名未患有ADHD)参与了这项为期6个月的研究。在基线阶段,家长完成了结构化诊断访谈和范德比尔特ADHD家长评定量表,以确定其孩子是否符合ADHD标准,还完成了儿童行为检查表(CBCL)以评估孩子的内化和外化行为;儿童完成了同伴支持感知量表(PPSS)以评估同伴受害经历。在6个月的随访阶段,家长完成了CBCL,儿童完成了PPSS。同时,患有和未患有ADHD的儿童的内化行为都与同伴受害有关;ADHD调节了这种关系,即在内化行为与同伴受害的关系上,患有ADHD的儿童表现得更为强烈。纵向来看,基线时的内化行为可预测6个月随访时的同伴受害情况;然而,进一步分析表明内化行为和同伴受害情况存在共同变化。这些发现表明,内化行为与同伴受害在当下以及随着时间推移都有关系,并且在患有ADHD的情况下,内化行为会增加同伴受害的风险。此外,内化行为和同伴受害似乎存在动态关系;也就是说,内化行为的减少预示着同伴受害情况也会有类似程度的减少。外化行为与同伴受害之间未观察到显著关系。本文还讨论了研究的意义和局限性。