| Literature DB >> 12915796 |
Patricia Lester1, Judith A Stein, Brenda Bursch.
Abstract
Adolescents of parents with HIV provide a test for proposed risk factors for somatic symptoms. This study prospectively examined family and developmental predictors of somatic symptoms in a high-risk community sample. A longitudinal latent variable model predicted adolescent somatization scores from the Brief Symptom Inventory 12 months after baseline assessment of 211 parent-adolescent pairs. In this cohort, somatic symptoms during adolescence persisted over time (p <.001) and were predicted by female gender (p <.05). In addition, (1). parental distress over pain predicted adolescent somatic symptoms at baseline and follow-up (p <.001), (2). adolescents who experienced their parents as highly rejecting reported more somatic symptoms at follow-up (p <.001), and (3). school problems correlated with somatic symptoms (p <.001), as well as parental rejection (p <.001), at baseline. These findings underscore potential relationships among parental illness, parent-child relationships, and somatic distress. Adolescents with school problems are particularly vulnerable, at least in the short run. These data support a family-based approach to treatment programs for adolescents with increased levels of somatic distress.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2003 PMID: 12915796 DOI: 10.1097/00004703-200308000-00004
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Dev Behav Pediatr ISSN: 0196-206X Impact factor: 2.225