The longitudinal relationship between child emotional disorder and parental mental health in the British Child and Adolescent Mental Health surveys 1999 and 2004
Wilkinson, K; Ball, S; Mitchell, SB; et al.Ukoumunne, OC; O'Mahen, HA; Tejerina-Arreal, M; Hayes, R; Berry, V; Petrie, I; Ford, T
Date: 26 March 2021
Journal
Journal of Affective Disorders
Publisher
Elsevier / International Society for Affective Disorders
Publisher DOI
Abstract
Background: Research suggests parental psychopathology has an adverse effect on child mental
health. However, due to the interactional nature of parent-child relationships and with a high rate of
emotional disorders reported in school-age children, it is important to know whether the effect is
reciprocal.
Methods: We explored the ...
Background: Research suggests parental psychopathology has an adverse effect on child mental
health. However, due to the interactional nature of parent-child relationships and with a high rate of
emotional disorders reported in school-age children, it is important to know whether the effect is
reciprocal.
Methods: We explored the longitudinal relationship between child and parent mental health in the
British Child and Adolescent Mental Health Surveys (N=7,100 child-parent dyads) and their threeyear follow-ups. The Development and Well-Being Assessment with DSM-IV diagnostic criteria was
used to measure child psychiatric diagnoses, while parental mental health was assessed using the
General Health Questionnaire. Multivariable logistic regression was used to explore the longitudinal
association between child emotional disorder and parent mental health.
Results: Parents of children who had an emotional disorder at baseline were more likely to have
poor mental health three years later compared with parents whose children had no psychiatric
diagnosis (33.3% versus 16.7%; crude odds ratio=2.52; adjusted odds ratio=2.19, 95% CI=1.58 to
3.05, p<0.001). Children of parents with poor mental health at baseline were more likely to develop
an emotional disorder three years later compared with children whose parents had good mental
health (5.2% versus 2.5%; crude odds ratio=2.08; adjusted odds ratio=1.63, 95% CI=1.18 to 2.25,
p=0.003).
Limitations: The findings of this research are limited by the survey data collected, the measures used
and survey dropout.
Conclusions: We detected a bi-directional relationship between child and parent mental health,
suggesting that effective intervention for one individual may benefit other family members.
Institute of Health Research
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