Young people who engage in child to parent violence: an integrative review of correlates and developmental pathways

IF 3.6 4区 心理学 Q1 PSYCHOLOGY, MULTIDISCIPLINARY
Allison Peck, M. Hutchinson, S. Provost
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引用次数: 5

Abstract

ABSTRACT Objective Review and synthesise Australian and New Zealand research on correlates and predictors of child to parent violence. Method Ten electronic databases were searched for relevant empirical studies. An integrative review methodology was adopted, with the Mixed Methods Appraisal Tool used to assess methodological quality. Results Twenty-one relevant studies met the inclusion criteria. Assessment of methodological quality revealed a moderate level of bias resulting from small sample sizes and a lack of representative sampling, missing outcome data, definitional variations, and inconsistencies in categorising variables across studies. The primary factors identified as correlates were prolonged or early childhood exposure to adult intimate partner violence and adversity, a childhood behavioural pattern of aggressive behaviour, mental health or emotional or behavioural disorders, other criminality and negative peer associations. Conclusion Extracting and understanding developmental pathways in the Australian and New Zealand context that contribute towards child to parent violence was limited by the amount and quality of research. Thus, highlighting the need for further research in this field. KEY POINTS What is already known about this topic: A small amount of research has been conducted in Australia and New Zealand relating to child to parent violence. The factors contributing to a young person engaging in child to parent violence are complex and interrelated. Exposure to adult intimate partner violence in childhood is a known correlate of child to parent violence. What this topic adds: This is the first integrative review of Australian and New Zealand evidence on child to parent violence. While childhood behavioural and emotional disorders were identified as correlates for young people engaging in violence towards parents, this research evidence is not strong. This review reveals a need to examine further the developmental pathways towards child to parent violence, identifying points of intervention best suited to service engagement.
参与儿童对父母暴力的年轻人:对相关因素和发展途径的综合审查
【摘要】目的回顾和综合澳大利亚和新西兰关于儿童对父母暴力的相关因素和预测因素的研究。方法检索10个电子数据库进行相关实证研究。采用综合评价方法,使用混合方法评价工具评估方法质量。结果21项相关研究符合纳入标准。对方法学质量的评估显示,由于样本量小、缺乏代表性的抽样、缺少结果数据、定义差异以及研究中变量分类不一致,存在中等程度的偏倚。被确定为相互关联的主要因素是儿童时期长期或早期接触成年亲密伴侣的暴力和逆境、儿童时期的攻击行为模式、精神健康或情绪或行为障碍、其他犯罪行为以及消极的同伴交往。结论在澳大利亚和新西兰的背景下,提取和理解导致儿童对父母暴力的发展途径受到研究数量和质量的限制。因此,突出了该领域进一步研究的必要性。关于这个话题的已知情况:澳大利亚和新西兰已经进行了少量关于儿童对父母暴力的研究。导致青少年对父母实施暴力的因素是复杂和相互关联的。儿童时期暴露于成人亲密伴侣暴力是儿童与父母暴力的已知关联。本主题补充内容:这是澳大利亚和新西兰关于儿童对父母暴力的证据的第一次综合审查。虽然儿童时期的行为和情绪障碍被认为与年轻人对父母实施暴力有关,但这一研究证据并不充分。这篇综述表明,有必要进一步研究儿童对父母暴力的发展途径,确定最适合服务参与的干预点。
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来源期刊
Australian Journal of Psychology
Australian Journal of Psychology PSYCHOLOGY, MULTIDISCIPLINARY-
CiteScore
5.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
19
期刊介绍: Australian Journal of Psychology is the premier scientific journal of the Australian Psychological Society. It covers the entire spectrum of psychological research and receives articles on all topics within the broad scope of the discipline. The journal publishes high quality peer-reviewed articles with reviewers and associate editors providing detailed assistance to authors to reach publication. The journal publishes reports of experimental and survey studies, including reports of qualitative investigations, on pure and applied topics in the field of psychology. Articles on clinical psychology or on the professional concerns of applied psychology should be submitted to our sister journals, Australian Psychologist or Clinical Psychologist. The journal publishes occasional reviews of specific topics, theoretical pieces and commentaries on methodological issues. There are also solicited book reviews and comments Annual special issues devoted to a single topic, and guest edited by a specialist editor, are published. The journal regards itself as international in vision and will accept submissions from psychologists in all countries.
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