Suicidal behaviour in adolescents: Associations with parental marital status and perceived parent–adolescent relationship

2005 ◽  
Vol 89 (1-3) ◽  
pp. 107-113 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kaat Ponnet ◽  
Robert Vermeiren ◽  
Ine Jespers ◽  
Belo Mussche ◽  
Vladislav Ruchkin ◽  
...  
2020 ◽  
pp. 036319902094574
Author(s):  
Rosemary Elliot

This article explains why a consensus emerged in the 1950s that courts should be satisfied with the arrangements made for children before parental divorce was granted. I locate this within an evolving child welfare landscape in the context of high levels of divorce in England. The issues at stake were the relationship of child welfare to parental marital status, how this should be established in individual cases, and the legitimacy and boundaries of state intervention in divorce cases. Such developments were absent in Scotland, where the Scottish judiciary believed in upholding the autonomy of parents to make their own arrangements.


TIMS Acta ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 14 (2) ◽  
pp. 73-84
Author(s):  
Nikolina Kuruzović

In order to better understand the phenomenon of the quality of different types of close relationships of adults, we have investigated several determinants which define them more clearly. We focused on the relational differences of the respondents according to several sociodemographic (age, gender, employment, marital status and children) and environmental factors (structure and relationships in the family). A total of 400 males and females, ranging from 19 to 51 years, completed a general questionnaire. It collected the data related to sociodemographic and environmental characteristics, as well as the Social Relations Network Inventory (NRI), which assessed the quality of five types of close relationships. The results indicate significant differences between the respondents in the quality of individual close relationships, based on the factors of age, gender, employment, marital status and parenthood, as well as according to the factors of the quality of family relations and parental marital status. The identified differences are particularly pronounced in terms of the quality of the relationship with the mother and the quality of the relationship with the friend, which is explained by the characteristic nature of these relationships, as well as the developmental roles and tasks of the adulthood.


1988 ◽  
Vol 33 (8) ◽  
pp. 696-701 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ashok K. Malla

Case records of all non-forensic psychiatric admissions (n = 5,729), over a three year period, to all the inpatient psychiatric facilities, within one geographic area were studied on a number of demographic, clinical, and treatment characteristics. Patients who had received E. C. T. were compared with those who did not receive this treatment. The results showed that a high proportion (21%) had received E. C. T. In comparison with patients not receiving E. C. T., E. C. T. recipients were significantly older, more often female, had greater number of previous admissions, greater incidence of violent behaviour, and longer stays in hospital. E. C. T. patients did not differ from others on social class, education, and marital status, nor was E. C. T. prescribed more often to patients who had demonstrated suicidal behaviour, even if they had a diagnosis of depression. E. C. T. and non E. C. T. patients received an equal number of psychotropic drugs.


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