与童年的逆境、依恋和其他积极的童年经历相比,以童年为中心是青少年心理健康的更广泛的预测因素

Angela J. Narayan, Donald E. Frederick, Jillian S. Merrick, Madison D. Sayyah, Matthew D. Larson
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引用次数: 4

摘要

这项研究引入了以中心为中心的新概念,这是一种衡量原籍家庭情感氛围的指标,也是目标成年个体对童年主要照顾者和其他家庭成员的安全感、接受感和支持感的感知。这项研究为成年受访者开发了一个以中心为中心的量表,并检验了总体以中心程度越高,抑郁和焦虑症状越低的假设;自杀念头和行为;和攻击行为;以及更高水平的生活满意度。将以中心为中心的预测效果与依恋相关的焦虑和回避以及不良和仁慈的童年经历(ACE和BCEs)进行比较。参与者通过Pro-A调查小组被招募到美国19-35岁年轻人的两个大型独立样本中[样本1(测试样本),N = 548人,53.5%为女性,2.2%为性别不合,68.3%为白人,在疫情前招募;样品2(复制样品),N = 1198人,56.2%为女性,2.3%为性别不合,66.4%为白人;在新冠疫情期间招募的]。参与者完成了新颖的中心度量表,该量表显示出强大的心理测量特性,并对儿童经历和心理健康结果进行了标准化、公开的评估。在两个样本中,以中心为中心是唯一能显著预测每种心理健康结果的变量。BCE预测了测试样本中除攻击性行为外的所有结果。在两个样本中,中心度和BCE也是唯一两个显著预测维度心理健康复合的变量。依恋相关的焦虑和回避以及ACE都没有那么广泛的预测性。中心度量表评估了儿童时期与不同背景和家庭组成的个人的家庭关系的情感方面。讨论了临床和文化意义。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Childhood Centeredness is a Broader Predictor of Young Adulthood Mental Health than Childhood Adversity, Attachment, and Other Positive Childhood Experiences

Childhood Centeredness is a Broader Predictor of Young Adulthood Mental Health than Childhood Adversity, Attachment, and Other Positive Childhood Experiences

This study introduced the novel concept of Centeredness, a measure of the emotional atmosphere of the family of origin and a target adult individual’s perception of feeling safe, accepted, and supported from childhood primary caregivers and other family members. This study developed a Centeredness scale for adult respondents and tested hypotheses that higher levels of overall Centeredness would predict lower levels of depression and anxiety symptoms; suicidal thoughts and behaviors (STBs); and aggressive behavior; and higher levels of life satisfaction. Predictive effects of Centeredness were compared against attachment-related anxiety and avoidance, and adverse and benevolent childhood experiences (ACEs and BCEs). Participants were recruited via the Prolific-Academic (Pro-A) survey panel into two large independent samples of US young adults aged 19–35 years [Sample 1 (test sample), N = 548, 53.5% female, 2.2% gender non-conforming, 68.3% White, recruited before the pandemic; Sample 2 (replication sample), N = 1,198, 56.2% female, 2.3% gender non-conforming, 66.4% White; recruited during the pandemic]. Participants completed the novel Centeredness scale, which showed strong psychometric properties, and standardized, publicly available assessments of childhood experiences and mental health outcomes. Centeredness was the only variable that significantly predicted each mental health outcome across both samples. BCEs predicted all outcomes except aggressive behavior in the test sample. Centeredness and BCEs were also the only two variables that significantly predicted a dimensional mental health composite in both samples. Neither attachment-related anxiety and avoidance nor ACEs were as broadly predictive. The Centeredness scale assesses emotional aspects of childhood family relationships with individuals of diverse backgrounds and family compositions. Clinical and cultural implications are discussed.

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