Lack of Association Between Behavioral Inhibition and Psychosocial Adversity Factors in Children at Risk for Anxiety Disorders
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Author
Hirshfeld-Becker, Dina R.Biederman, Joseph
Faraone, Stephen V.
Segool, Natasha
Buchwald, Jennifer
Rosenbaum, Jerrold F.
Keyword
Psychiatry and Mental healthJournal title
American Journal of PsychiatryDate Published
2004-03Publication Volume
161Publication Issue
3Publication Begin page
547Publication End page
555
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Objective: In a previous controlled study of offspring at risk for anxiety disorders, the authors found that parental panic disorder with comorbid major depression was associated with child behavioral inhibition, the temperamental tendency to be quiet and restrained in unfamiliar situations. To explore whether this association was mediated by environmental factors, the authors examined associations between psychosocial adversity variables and behavioral inhibition in this group of children. Method: Subjects included 200 offspring of parents with panic disorder and/or major depression and 84 comparison children of parents without mood or anxiety disorders. Behavioral inhibition was assessed through laboratory observations. The associations between behavioral inhibition and the following psychosocial factors were examined: socioeconomic status; an index of adversity factors found in previous studies to be additively associated with child psychopathology; family intactness, conflict, expressiveness, and cohesiveness; exposure to parental psychopathology; sibship size; birth order; and gender. Results: The results showed no associations between behavioral inhibition and any of the psychosocial factors in the study group as a whole, despite adequate power to detect medium effect sizes. Among low-risk comparison children only, some definitions of behavioral inhibition were associated with low socioeconomic status, low family cohesion, and female gender. Conclusions: The results suggest that the psychosocial adversity factors examined in this study do not explain the previous finding that offspring of parents with panic disorder are at high risk for behavioral inhibition.DOI
10.1176/appi.ajp.161.3.547ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1176/appi.ajp.161.3.547
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