Parenting attitudes in people with obsessive-compulsive disorder and emotional symptoms in their children / álvaro Frías, Carol Palma, Núria Farriols, Ferrán Aliaga, Sara Navarro, Laia Solbes.

By: Contributor(s): Material type: ArticlePublisher: [Madrid] : Colegio Oficial de Psicólogos de Madrid, 2020Content type:
  • texto
Media type:
  • computadora
Carrier type:
  • recurso en línea
ISSN:
  • 1130-5274
Subject(s): Genre/Form: DDC classification:
  • 616.89 23
LOC classification:
  • RC467 .F733 2020
Online resources: Summary: This study sought to delineate distinctive parenting attitudes in people with obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), speci- fic emotional symptoms in their children, and the association between them. Forty OCD parents and their children were compared with 37 parents with adjustment disorders and their children by using standardized clinical questionnaires. Children of OCD parents exhibited significantly greater (subclinical) emotional symptoms when compared with children of non-OCD parents. After controlling for parents and childrens depression and anxiety symptoms, OCD parents reported significantly poorer parenting attitudes overall relative to non-OCD parents. The presence of sexual/somatic obsessions in OCD parents predicted anxiety symptom severity among their children, but both relationships were mediated by parental involvement. These findings indicate the importance of addressing and treating the distinctive parenting attitudes among people with OCD and its influence on their childrens emotional symptoms.
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This study sought to delineate distinctive parenting attitudes in people with obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), speci- fic emotional symptoms in their children, and the association between them. Forty OCD parents and their children were compared with 37 parents with adjustment disorders and their children by using standardized clinical questionnaires. Children of OCD parents exhibited significantly greater (subclinical) emotional symptoms when compared with children of non-OCD parents. After controlling for parents and childrens depression and anxiety symptoms, OCD parents reported significantly poorer parenting attitudes overall relative to non-OCD parents. The presence of sexual/somatic obsessions in OCD parents predicted anxiety symptom severity among their children, but both relationships were mediated by parental involvement. These findings indicate the importance of addressing and treating the distinctive parenting attitudes among people with OCD and its influence on their childrens emotional symptoms.

Descripción basada en Clínica y salud, vol. 31, núm. 2 (2020), P. 91-98.

Descripción basada en metadatos suministrados por el editor y otras fuentes.

Recurso electrónico. Santa Fe, Arg.: elibro, 2023. Disponible vía World Wide Web. El acceso puede estar limitado para las bibliotecas afiliadas a elibro.