| Literature DB >> 25788041 |
Abstract
Parental behaviors, most notably overcontrol, lack of warmth and expressed anxiety, have been implicated in models of the development and maintenance of anxiety disorders in children and young people. Theories of normative development have proposed that different parental responses are required to support emotional development in childhood and adolescence, yet age has not typically been taken into account in studies of parenting and anxiety disorders. In order to identify whether associations between anxiety disorder status and parenting differ in children and adolescents, we compared observed behaviors of parents of children (7-10 years) and adolescents (13-16 years) with and without anxiety disorders (n = 120), while they undertook a series of mildly anxiety-provoking tasks. Parents of adolescents showed significantly lower levels of expressed anxiety, intrusiveness and warm engagement than parents of children. Furthermore, offspring age moderated the association between anxiety disorder status and parenting behaviors. Specifically, parents of adolescents with anxiety disorders showed higher intrusiveness and lower warm engagement than parents of non-anxious adolescents. A similar relationship between these parenting behaviors and anxiety disorder status was not observed among parents of children. The findings suggest that theoretical accounts of the role of parental behaviors in anxiety disorders in children and adolescents should distinguish between these different developmental periods. Further experimental research to establish causality, however, would be required before committing additional resources to targeting parenting factors within treatment.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25788041 PMCID: PMC4494040 DOI: 10.1007/s10802-015-0005-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Abnorm Child Psychol ISSN: 0091-0627
Sample characteristics
| Anxious children ( | Non-anxious children ( | Anxious adolescents ( | Non-anxious adolescents ( | Statistics | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Child/adolescent gender (boys: girls) | 14:16 | 20:10 | 14:16 | 16:14 |
|
| Age in months (mean, | 112.20 (10.49), 94–130 a | 110.60 (9.77), 96–131 | 181.50 (13.48), 158–198 a | 183.03 (13.79), 161–205 |
|
| Ethnicity (% White British) | 93 % | 93 % | 93 % | 90 % |
|
| Family SES (% “higher” or “professional”) | 67 % | 73 % | 67 % a | 97 % a |
|
| Parent gender (% female) | 100 % | 100 % | 93 % | 90 % |
|
| SCAS-c total (mean, | 36.20 (19.03) | 27.89 (10.74) | 39.23 (17.62) b | 10.97 (5.54) b |
|
| SCAS-p total (mean, | 36.03 (14.75) a | 13.97 (5.86) a | 31.77 (18.52) b | 6.87 (3.15) b |
|
| SMFQ-c total (mean, | 6.70 (4.50) | 4.79 (3.20) | 7.34 (5.77) b | 2.17 (2.41) b |
|
| SMFQ-p total (mean, | 6.60 (4.97) a | 1.83 (2.28) a | 8.63 (7.89) b | 1.43 (1.92) b |
|
Where self-report data was missing, this was less than 10 % of the dataset. Superscript letters refer to pairwise comparisons (conducted for children with AD versus adolescents with AD, children with AD versus non-anxious children, and adolescents with AD versus non-anxious adolescents); means that share subscripts within rows are significantly different at p < .05
Spearman’s correlations between different parenting behavior codes
| Expressed anxiety | Passivity | Promotion of avoidance | Overprotection | Intrusiveness | Encouragement | Warmth | Engagement | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Expressed anxiety | – | |||||||
| Passivity | 0.28** | – | ||||||
| Promotion of avoidance | 0.17 | −0.03 | – | |||||
| Overprotection | 0.15 | 0.03 | −0.01 | – | ||||
| Intrusiveness | 0.53*** | 0.15 | 0.18* | 0.04 | – | |||
| Encouragement | −0.15 | −0.39** | −0.02 | 0.18 | −0.19* | – | ||
| Warmth | 0.06 | −0.06 | −0.10 | 0.21* | −0.12 | 0.58*** | – | |
| Engagement | 0.12 | −0.16 | −0.08 | 0.22* | 0.07 | 0.59*** | 0.79*** | – |
* p < .05, ** p < .01, *** p < .001
Group differences in child/adolescent and parent behaviors across all tasks
| Anxious children | Non-anxious children | Anxious adolescents | Non-anxious adolescents | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Child/adolescent | Anxiety/avoidance (mean, | 1.50 (0.32) | 1.45 (0.24) | 1.64 (0.39) a | 1.23 (0.20) a |
| Parent | Anxiety (mean, | 1.93 (0.56) a | 1.80 (0.39) | 1.23 (0.16) a b | 1.15 (0.15) b |
| Intrusiveness (mean, | 1.65 (0.57) a | 1.82 (0.44) | 1.31 (0.22) a b | 1.19 (0.19) b | |
| Positive behaviour (mean, | 3.30 (0.44) a | 3.12 (0.49) | 2.80 (0.36) a b | 3.13 (0.38) b | |
| Encouragement (mean, | 2.88 (0.53) | 2.59 (0.54) | 2.85 (0.60) | 2.88 (0.52) | |
Superscript letters refer to pairwise comparisons (conducted for children with AD versus adolescents with AD, children with AD versus non-anxious children, and adolescents with AD versus non-anxious adolescents); means that share subscripts within rows are significantly different at p < .05
Fig 1Interactions between anxiety disorder and age group for parental behaviours across tasks