scholarly journals Behavioral problems and temperamental characteristics among children in alcoholic families

2018 ◽  
Vol 23 (1) ◽  
pp. 52
Author(s):  
OttilingamSomasundaram Ravindran ◽  
K Hima ◽  
S Natarajan ◽  
R Sathianathan
2001 ◽  
Vol 22 (3) ◽  
pp. 374-392 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ellen Peterson Edwards ◽  
Kenneth E. Leonard ◽  
Rina Das Eiden

2014 ◽  
Vol 12 (4) ◽  
pp. 9-28
Author(s):  
Iwona Grzegorzewska ◽  
Lidia Cierpiałkowska

Abstract This study examines whether social support perceived from different sources can significantly predict behavioral problems in children from alcoholic families. Participants are composed of 540 children in three age groups. We use the Child and Adolescent Social Support Scale and Youth Self Report/YSR 11-18. Our finding was that children of alcoholics have a greater risk of externalizing symptoms in comparison to children of non-alcoholics. Social support significantly predicts behaviour problems in the different life periods. In alcoholic families it was observed that mother, teacher and peer support negatively correlated with externalizing problems in the different developmental periods. Regression Analysis showed that the important predictors for externalizing such problems are low levels of support from teachers (in middle childhood and late adolescence), peers (in middle childhood) and mothers (in early adolescence). Our concluding remark is that social support perceived by children of alcoholics differs from the support perceived by children from control groups. This is important for prevention and therapy.


2018 ◽  
Vol 31 (02) ◽  
pp. 771-788
Author(s):  
Ka I Ip ◽  
Jennifer M. Jester ◽  
Leon I. Puttler ◽  
Robert A. Zucker

AbstractChildren of alcoholics (COAs) are at risk for elevated internalizing and externalizing symptoms. Yet, little is known about the familial and behavioral adjustments of COAs following parental separation. Using an ecological–transactional framework, we examined how multiple risk factors contributed to the formation of different alcoholic family structures and how living in heterogeneous family structures affected COAs’ behavioral problems. The Michigan Longitudinal Study, a multiwave study on initially intact alcoholic and control families with preschool-age children (n= 503), was used to evaluate outcomes of offspring, when families either remained intact or were separated when the child was aged 12–14. Alcoholic families who later transitioned into stepfamilies were characterized with higher paternal antisociality, marital aggression, and serious family crises than alcoholic families that remained intact. COAs in stepfamilies (but not in single-parent families) exhibited higher levels of internalizing and externalizing symptoms in preadolescence compared with those in alcoholic intact families, in part because of elevated behavioral risk at age 3. Structural equation modeling indicated that the aggregated risk of stepfamily residence directly related to COAs’ internalizing and indirectly related to COAs’ externalizing problems, partially mediated by family stressors. Findings suggest targeting COAs in separated families for early intervention.


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