| Literature DB >> 35455519 |
Suzanne Verhaar1, Mandy Louise Matthewson1, Caitlin Bentley2.
Abstract
This study qualitatively investigated the mental health of adults exposed to parental alienating behaviours in childhood. Research suggests that exposure to parental alienating behaviours in childhood can have a profound impact on the mental health of those children later in life, including experiencing anxiety disorders and trauma reactions. An international sample of 20 adults exposed to parental alienating behaviours in childhood participated in semi-structured interviews on their experience and its impact. Four themes were identified: mental health difficulties, including anxiety disorders and trauma reactions, emotional pain, addiction and substance use, and coping and resilience. Intergenerational transmission of parental alienation was found. Confusion in understanding their experience of alienation, the mental health sequelae, and elevated levels of suicidal ideation were found. This study demonstrated the insidious nature of parental alienation and parental alienating behaviours and provided further evidence of these behaviours as a form of emotional abuse.Entities:
Keywords: alienated child/ren; alienating parent/s; child abuse; intergenerational transmission; mental health; parental alienation; targeted parent/s
Year: 2022 PMID: 35455519 PMCID: PMC9026878 DOI: 10.3390/children9040475
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Children (Basel) ISSN: 2227-9067
Demographic data alienated adult children study.
| ID | Age | Gender | Country of Birth | Current Location | Marital Status | Educational Level | Employment Status | Alienated from | Age of Separation | Reunification Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | 37 | M | Chile | Australia | Separated | TAFE | Employed | Father | 3 | Yes |
| 2. | 30 | F | USA | Australia | De Facto | Undergrad | Employed | Father | 13 | Yes |
| 3. | 35 | F | Australia | Australia | De Facto | Undergrad | Employed | Father | 2 | Somewhat |
| 4. | 53 | M | Australia | Australia | Maried | Undergrad | Employed | Father | 5 | Somewhat |
| 5. | 52 | F | USA | USA | Divorced | Masters | Employed | Father | 4 | Yes |
| 6. | 49 | F | Netherlands | Netherlands | Single | Undergrad | Employed | Father | 12 | Yes |
| 7. | 50 | M | Australia | Australia | Widow | High School | Unemployed | Father | 2 | Yes |
| 8. | 35 | M | Australia | Australia | De Facto | Diploma | Unemployed | Father | 7 | Yes |
| 9. | 30 | F | Thailand | Australia | De Facto | TAFE | Employed | Father | 1 | Yes |
| 10. | 59 | F | USA | USA | Divorced | PhD | Unemployed | Father | 13 | No |
| 11. | 47 | F | Australia | Australia | Divorced | Undergrad | Employed | Father | 2 | Yes |
| 12. | 54 | F | Australia | Australia | Single | High School | Volunteer | Father | 3 | Yes |
| 13. | 35 | F | Englanda | Thailand | Single | Undergrad | Employed | Mother | 8 | Yes |
| 14. | 44 | F | Australia | Australia | Partner | Diploma | Employed | Mother | 10 | Yes |
| 15. | 49 | F | Australia | Australia | Married | Undergrad | Employed | Father | 7 | Somewhat |
| 16. | 26 | F | USA | Australia | Single | High School | Employed | Mother | 13 | Yes |
| 17. | 45 | F | Belgium | Belgium | Married | Masters | Employed | Father | 7 | Yes |
| 18. | 30 | M | England | Australia | Single | High School | Employed | Father | 11 | Yes |
| 19. | 33 | F | England | Australia | Single | Honours | Student | Mother | 3 | Yes |
| 20. | 28 | F | Germany | Germany | Partner | Masters | Student | Mother | 12 | Yes |
Study protocol.
| Criteria | Purpose | Strategy | Additional Rigour |
|---|---|---|---|
| Credibility | To establish confidence that participants’ accounts were true/credible | To recruit from support groups | Investigators spent time liaising with potential participants before the study to ensure suitability |
| Dependability | To ensure findings made | NVivo used to capture data analysis | A detailed track record of the data collection was kept outlining each step of the process |
| Confirmability | To establish confidence that similar results would be confirmed by other researchers | To reflect on own biases and assumptions | Frequent reflective supervision/correspondence with head investigator |
| Transferability | The degree to which results can be transferred to other settings | Data saturation | Data saturation was achieved when no new information was able to be obtained from transcripts after multiple coding sessions from 2 investigators |