Parent-level risk factors for children's obsessive beliefs, interpretation biases, and obsessive-compulsive symptoms: A cross-sectional examination

Publication date: July 2018Source: Journal of Obsessive-Compulsive and Related Disorders, Volume 18Author(s): Noah Chase Berman, Ryan J. Jacoby, Alexandra D. Sullivan, Susanne Hoeppner, Jamie A. Micco, Sabine WilhelmAbstractThere is conflicting research on the association between parents’ and children's obsessive-compulsive (OC) features (obsessive beliefs, interpretation biases, and OC symptoms) and how other parent-level risk factors (e.g., depression) influence the emergence of OC features in youth. To bridge this gap, we adopted a multi-method and multi-informant approach, including both child- and parent-report measures, as well as in vivo behavioral tasks, to evaluate how parent-level factors contribute to children's OC features. Twenty-seven parents and 48 children, who reported OC features across a spectrum of severity, completed diagnostic interviews, self-report questionnaires, and attended an experimental session in our laboratory. We first conducted univariate linear regressions to identify the significant parent-level predictors and applied the False Discovery Rate to control for Type 1 error. Next, significant predictors were entered into a multivariate mixed-effects linear regression model that included a random intercept for family unit. Results suggested that the transmission of beliefs, interpretations, and symptoms is not domain-specific; rather, certain parent factors - religiosity, depression, anxiety, stress, and psychological control - seem to operate...
Source: Journal of Obsessive Compulsive and Related Disorders - Category: Psychiatry Source Type: research