| Literature DB >> 20175902 |
Robert E Larzelere1, Ronald B Cox, Gail L Smith.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The strongest causal evidence that customary spanking increases antisocial behavior is based on prospective studies that control statistically for initial antisocial differences. None of those studies have investigated alternative disciplinary tactics that parents could use instead of spanking, however. Further, the small effects in those studies could be artifactual due to residual confounding, reflecting child effects on the frequency of all disciplinary tactics. This study re-analyzes the strongest causal evidence against customary spanking and uses these same methods to determine whether alternative disciplinary tactics are more effective in reducing antisocial behavior.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20175902 PMCID: PMC2841151 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2431-10-10
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Pediatr ISSN: 1471-2431 Impact factor: 2.125
Frequencies of Four Disciplinary Tactics and Prevalence of Psychotherapy
| Corrective Action | 0 | 1 | 2 | 3+ |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Spanking | 449 | 158 | 111 | 67 |
| Grounding | 581 | 109 | 57 | 38 |
| Privilege removal | 573 | 117 | 53 | 42 |
| Sending to room | 389 | 183 | 98 | 115 |
| Psychotherapya | 748 | 34 | -- | -- |
aDichotomous, i.e., whether child had seen a psychotherapist in the past year.
Inter-Correlations for Disciplinary Tactics, Psychotherapy, Control Variables, Antisocial Behavior, Hyperactivity, and Headstrong Subscales
| Variable | ||||||||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Spank | 1. | .14 | .09 | .09 | -.00 | -.21 | -.12 | -.07 | -.07 | .08 | .15 | .16 | .21 | .22 | -.03 | -.01 | .02 | |
| 2. Grounding | .27 | 1. | .35 | .07 | .04 | -.13 | -.07 | -.08 | -.04 | .18 | .20 | .14 | .18 | .22 | -.07 | -.05 | .04 | |
| 3. Priv. removal | .22 | .42 | 1. | .16 | .02 | .06 | -.06 | -.05 | -.02 | .14 | .03 | .01 | .04 | .08 | -.03 | -.02 | .05 | |
| 4. Sent to room | .31 | .22 | .30 | 1. | .03 | .10 | -.01 | .03 | .00 | -.12 | .04 | .12 | .08 | .01 | .05 | -.02 | -.07 | |
| 5. Therapy | .01 | .04 | .03 | .04 | 1. | .00 | -.04 | -.11 | .05 | -.06 | .16 | .13 | .11 | .14 | .02 | -.01 | .03 | |
| 6. Cogntv stim | -.17 | -.11 | .04 | .07 | -.01 | 1. | .24 | .03 | .24 | -.26 | -.13 | -.10 | -.22 | -.23 | -.04 | .01 | -.01 | |
| 7. SES | -.10 | -.07 | -.06 | -.02 | -.02 | .22 | 1. | .02 | .14 | -.09 | -.08 | -.01 | -.14 | -.12 | -.05 | -.08 | .01 | |
| 8. Female | -.10 | -.09 | -.08 | -.03 | -.13 | .02 | .01 | 1. | .06 | .00 | -.13 | -.09 | -.12 | -.16 | -.02 | .02 | -.05 | |
| 9. Emot. support | -.07 | -.05 | -.04 | -.02 | .03 | .25 | .15 | .04 | 1. | -.16 | -.06 | -.03 | -.10 | -.17 | -.03 | -.01 | -.07 | |
| 10. Non-White | .09 | .16 | .13 | -.06 | -.07 | -.25 | -.07 | .05 | -.17 | 1. | -.04 | -.16 | .05 | .08 | .03 | .03 | .03 | |
| [1988 Behavior Problem Index subscales]: | ||||||||||||||||||
| 11. Hyperactivity | .19 | .21 | .08 | .12 | .15 | -.12 | -.08 | -.13 | -.05 | -.02 | 1. | .55 | .44 | .39 | -.41 | -.13 | -.04 | |
| 12. Headstrong | .23 | .19 | .09 | .21 | .11 | -.07 | -.06 | -.11 | -.04 | -.11 | .56 | 1. | .47 | .37 | -.16 | -.41 | -.09 | |
| 13. Antisocial | .27 | .22 | .11 | .18 | .10 | -.19 | -.15 | -.15 | -.09 | .07 | .44 | .49 | 1. | .49 | -.13 | -.15 | -.49 | |
| [1990 Behavior Problem Index subscale]: | ||||||||||||||||||
| 14. Antisocial | .27 | .25 | .14 | .13 | .12 | -.21 | -.15 | -.17 | -.15 | .09 | .41 | .39 | .49 | 1. | .16 | .25 | .52 | |
| [Gain in Behavior Problem Index subscales from 1988 to 1990]: | ||||||||||||||||||
| 15. Hyperactivity | -.04 | -.06 | -.04 | .02 | .00 | -.02 | -.04 | -.01 | -.03 | .02 | -.42 | -.15 | -.12 | .15 | 1. | .39 | .28 | |
| 16. Headstrong | -.03 | -.06 | -.03 | -.04 | .00 | .01 | -.04 | .03 | .00 | .01 | -.13 | -.40 | -.16 | .26 | .39 | 1. | .39 | |
| 17. Antisocial | .01 | .03 | .04 | -.05 | .03 | -.02 | -.01 | -.03 | -.06 | .02 | -.03 | -.09 | -.49 | .53 | .26 | .41 | 1. | |
| Full sample statistics | ||||||||||||||||||
| Mean | .74 | .43 | .44 | .92 | .04 | .06 | .07 | .49 | .03 | .59 | 1.68 | 1.71 | 50.29 | 50.17 | -.05 | .01 | -.12 | |
| | .994 | .826 | .839 | 1.096 | .204 | .733 | .677 | .500 | .785 | .492 | .364 | .364 | 18.99 | 19.55 | .338 | .339 19.52 | ||
| Subsample statistics | ||||||||||||||||||
| Mean | 1.02 | .59 | .61 | 1.27 | .05 | .06 | .05 | .46 | .00 | .61 | 1.71 | 1.76 | 53.09 | 52.93 | -.06 | .00 | -.16 | |
| | 1.038 | .918 | .931 | 1.102 | .213 | .733 | .665 | .499 | .790 | .489 | .361 | .351 | 18.84 | 19.30 | .335 | .341 19.26 | ||
Note: N = 785 below diagonal for full sample (782 for therapy). N = 571 above diagonal for subsample with some use of at least one tactic (570 for therapy). Cogntv stim = Cognitive stimulus. P < .05 if |r| > .08.
Antisocial Behavior in 1990 by Spanking Frequency in 1988 and Six Other Covariates for Children from 6 to 9 Years Old in 1988
| Main Effects and Interactions | Degrees of Freedom | Mean Sum of Squares | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Predictors from 1988 | |||
| Main Effects | |||
| Spanking frequency | 3 | 798.4 | 2.87* |
| Gender | 1 | 1576.2 | 5.66* |
| Cognitive Stimulation | 2 | 383.3 | 1.38 |
| Emotional Support | 2 | 1271.3 | 4.56* |
| Ethnicity | 1 | 0.8 | .00 |
| Socioeconomic status | 2 | 1170.6 | 4.20* |
| Antisocial behavior (zero, low, high) | 2 | 12460.2 | 44.72*** |
| 2-Way Interactions With Spanking | |||
| Gender | 3 | 386.4 | 1.39 |
| Cognitive Stimulation | 6 | 183.4 | 0.66 |
| Emotional Support | 6 | 375.8 | 1.35 |
| Ethnicity | 3 | 371.8 | 1.33 |
| Socioeconomic status | 6 | 190.3 | 0.68 |
| Antisocial behavior | 6 | 115.5 | 0.42 |
| Residual | 741 | 278.6 |
Note. A natural log transformation of 1990 antisocial behavior was used to reduce skewness. The original 807 cases were reduced to N = 785 for this analysis due to missing values on grounding, privilege removal, or sending child to room.
*P < .05. ***P < .001.
Figure 11990 Antisocial Behavior by Weekly Frequency of Disciplinary Tactics in 1988 (or by Psychotherapy) Controlling for the Same Variables as the Original Study.
Effects of Alternative Disciplinary Tactics and Psychotherapy in 1988 on Antisocial Behavior in 1990 When Substituted for Spanking in the Analysis Summarized in Table 3
| Corrective Action | Degrees of Freedom | Mean Sum of Squares | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Spanking | 3 | 798.4 | 2.87* |
| Grounding | 3 | 893.1 | 3.20* |
| Privilege removal | 3 | 435.4 | 1.53 |
| Sending to room | 3 | 632.6 | 2.20a |
| Psychotherapy | 1 | 1116.5 | 3.93* |
N = 785, except 782 for Psychotherapy.
aP < .10.
*P < .05.
Standardized Regression Coefficients (βs) Predicting 1990 Antisocial Behavior from Four 1988 Disciplinary Tactics and Psychotherapy by Covariate for Pre-Existing Behavior Problems
| Covariate for Initial Behavior Problems | Spank | Grounding | Remove Privileges | Send to Room | Psychotherapy | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| None | ||||||
| Zero-order | .27*** a | .25*** | .14*** | .13*** | .12** | |
| Controlling for other predictorsb | .18*** | .20*** | .11 | .14** | .39** | |
| Antisocial Behavior 1988b | ||||||
| Dichotomous | .13** | .17** | .11 | .10* | .28* | |
| Trichotomous | .10* c | .12* | .10 | .09f | .24* | |
| Continuous | .10 | .14f | .09 | .07 | .23 | |
| Externalizing Behavior 1988b | ||||||
| Continuous (measured variable) | .09 | .10 | .07 | .07 | .19 | |
| Continuous (latent variable)d | .04 | .04 | .04 | -.03 | .02 | |
| Gain in latent externalizinge | -.04 | -.07 | -.04 | -.05 | .01 | |
Note. N = 785 for the disciplinary tactics; 782 for psychotherapy. A positive β indicates that those receiving the disciplinary tactic in 1988 averaged higher 1990 antisocial behavior than those not receiving that disciplinary tactic, after controlling for the variables indicated. The βs are based on linear associations for the first row and the last 2 rows. The other βs are based on the effect size contrasting the weighted marginal mean antisocial behavior for one or more occurrences of the disciplinary actions (or seeing a psychotherapist) vs. the mean antisocial behavior associated with no occurrences of the disciplinary action or psychotherapy.
aThis equals the effect size estimated from Straus et al. [1] in Gershoff's meta-analysis,[5] since she based effect sizes on zero-order correlations. (r = .27 is equivalent to d = .56, using the DSTAT program used by Gershoff)[61]
bThe "other predictors" were those in the ANCOVA in Straus et al.[1]: gender, ethnicity, SES, cognitive stimulation, emotional support, and the 2-way interactions of the disciplinary tactic with each of those predictors. The 2-way interactions were not included in the structural equation modeling.
cOur best re-analysis of Straus et al. [1] Our estimate of β from their graph is .23, but the estimated βs from our 10 samples ranged from .10 to .13, before applying the natural log transformation to 1990 antisocial. In contrast, the F values for spanking in our 10 samples ranged from 3.0 to 5.3, which included the original F value (4.4) within its range.
dThe latent structural equation modeling analyses estimate linear associations between the frequency of each corrective action and Antisocial behavior in 1990, controlling for the other predictors in the model, including latent Externalizing problems, which has three indicators (Antisocial, Hyperactivity, and Headstrong), with correlated residuals between the latter two subscales. Fit indices: χ2s (13, N = 785) from 35.05 to 40.50, ps from .0001 to .0008; CFIs from .971 to .976; RMSEAs from .046 to .052.
eThis row summarizes the only analyses predicting the 16-item Externalizing score in 1990, in this case in terms of gain scores in that latent score from 1988 to 1990 (see Figure 2). Fit indices: χ2s (12, N = 785) from 7.65 to 13.06, ps from .36 to .81; CFIs from .996 to 1.000; RMSEAs from .000 to .011.
fP < .10.
*P < .05. **P < .01. ***P < .001.
Figure 2Structural Equation Model of Latent Gain Scores in Externalizing Behavior Problems from 1988 to 1990.
Standardized Regression Coefficients (βs) Predicting 1990 Antisocial Behavior from Four 1988 Disciplinary Tactics and Psychotherapy by Covariate for Pre-Existing Behavior Problems After Dropping Cases Using No Disciplinary Tactics of Any Kind
| Covariate for Initial | Spank | Grounding | Remove Privileges | Send to Room | Psychotherapy | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| None | ||||||
| Zero-order | .22*** | .22*** | .08d | .01 | .14** | |
| Controlling for other predictorsa | .11d | .15*** | .04 | .03 | .38** | |
| Antisocial Behavior 1988a | ||||||
| Dichotomous | .09 | .14** | .06 | .02 | .30* | |
| Trichotomous | .08 | .11** | .08 | .05 | .23 | |
| Continuous | .08 | .13* | .06 | .03 | .24 | |
| Externalizing Behavior 1988a | ||||||
| Continuous (measured variable) | .08 | .08 | .05 | .05 | .24 | |
| Continuous (latent variable)b | .03 | .04 | .04 | -.05 | .02 | |
| Gain in Latent Externalizingc | -.03 | -.07 | -.02 | -.02 | .01 | |
Note. N = 571 for the disciplinary tactics; 570 for psychotherapy. A positive β indicates that those receiving the disciplinary tactic in 1988 averaged higher 1990 antisocial behavior than those not receiving that disciplinary tactic, after controlling for the variables indicated. The βs are based on linear associations for the first row and the last 2 rows. The other βs are based on the effect size contrasting the weighted marginal mean antisocial behavior for one or more occurrences of the disciplinary actions (or seeing a psychotherapist) vs. the mean antisocial behavior associated with no occurrences of the disciplinary action or psychotherapy.
aThe "other predictors" were those in the ANCOVA in Straus et al. [1]: gender, ethnicity, SES, cognitive stimulation, emotional support, and the 2-way interactions of the disciplinary tactic with each of those predictors. The 2-way interactions were not included in the structural equation modeling or the gain in latent externalizing problems.
bThe latent structural equation modeling analyses estimate linear associations between the frequency of each disciplinary tactic and Antisocial behavior in 1990, controlling for the other predictors in the model, including latent Externalizing problems, which has three indicators (Antisocial, Hyperactivity, and Headstrong), with correlated residuals between the latter two subscales. Fit indices: χ2s (13, N = 571) from 34.67 to 37.49, ps from .0003 to .0010; CFIs from .964 to .968; RMSEAs from .054 to .057.
cThis row summarizes the only analyses predicting the 16-item Externalizing score in 1990, in this case in terms of gain scores in that latent score from 1988 to 1990 (see Figure 2). Fit indices: χ2s (12, N = 571) from 10.88 to 15.65, ps from .19 to .54; CFIs from .980 to 1.000; RMSEAs from .000 to .024.
dP < .10.
*P < .05. **P < .01. ***P < .001.
Standardized Regression Coefficients (βs) Predicting 1990 Antisocial Behavior from Four 1988 Disciplinary Tactics and Psychotherapy by Covariate for Pre-Existing Behavior Problems When Entered Simultaneously (and Without Interactions)
| Covariate for Initial Behavior Problems | Spank | Grounding | Remove Privileges | Send to Room | Psychotherapy | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| None | ||||||
| Control only for other tactics | .23*** | .21*** | .02 | -.00 | .27** | |
| Controlling for other predictorsa | .19*** | .18*** | .01 | .05 | .24** | |
| Antisocial Behavior 1988a | ||||||
| Dichotomous | .15*** | .17** | .02 | .02 | .22* | |
| Trichotomous | .12** | .14* | .01 | .01 | .19* | |
| Continuous | .12* | .15** | .02 | .00 | .19* | |
| Externalizing Behavior 1988a | ||||||
| Continuous (measured variable) | .12* | .12d | .02 | .01 | .13 | |
| Continuous (latent variable)b | .04 | .03 | .04 | -.05 | .02 | |
| Gain in Latent Externalizingc | -.02 | -.06 | .00 | -.03 | .02 | |
Note. N = 782, except N = 785 for the structural equation models. A positive β indicates that those receiving the disciplinary tactic in 1988 averaged higher 1990 antisocial behavior than those not receiving that disciplinary tactic, after controlling for the variables indicated. The βs are based on linear associations for the last 2 rows. The other βs are based on the effect size contrasting the weighted marginal mean antisocial behavior for one or more occurrences of the disciplinary actions (or seeing a psychotherapist) vs. the mean antisocial behavior associated with no occurrences of the disciplinary action or psychotherapy. In contrast to Tables 5 and 6, all results control for the other four corrective actions.
aThe "other predictors" were those in the ANCOVA in Straus et al.[1]: gender, ethnicity, SES, cognitive stimulation, and emotional support as well as the other four corrective actions. The 2-way interactions were not included in any analyses in this table.
bThe latent structural equation modeling analysis estimates linear associations between the frequency of each disciplinary tactic and Antisocial behavior in 1990, controlling for the other predictors in the model, including latent Externalizing problems, which has three indicators (Antisocial, Hyperactivity, and Headstrong), with correlated residuals between the latter two subscales. Fit indices: χ2 (22, N = 785) = 47.69, p = .0008; CFI = .974; RMSEA = .040.
cThis row summarizes the only analysis predicting the 16-item Externalizing score in 1990, in this case in terms of gain scores in that latent score from 1988 to 1990 (see Figure 2). Fit indices: χ2 (21, N = 785) = 22.06, p = .34; CFI = .993; RMSEA = .011.
dP < .10.
*P < .05. **P < .01. ***P < .001.