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A child-parent dyad study on adolescent paranoia and the influence of adverse life events, bullying, parenting stress and family support

A child-parent dyad study on adolescent paranoia and the influence of adverse life events, bullying, parenting stress and family support
A child-parent dyad study on adolescent paranoia and the influence of adverse life events, bullying, parenting stress and family support
Background: paranoid beliefs commonly occur in the general adolescent population. Exposure to adverse life events (ALEs) and/or bullying are important environmental risk factors. The extent to which others, especially parents, are available to help a young person cope with stressful situations may offset this risk.

Study design: a cross-sectional adolescent-parent dyad design (n = 142 pairs) was used to test whether an adolescent’s perception of being supported by their family, and/or the parent’s perception of stress and burden in their parenting role, moderated the association between environmental risk and adolescent paranoid beliefs.

Study results: moderation analysis indicated that ALEs were significantly associated with adolescent paranoid beliefs when parents reported high stress and burden in their parenting role. Conversely, at low and moderate levels of parental stress, ALEs were unrelated to paranoid beliefs. Bullying was strongly associated with paranoia, with no moderation effects. The adolescent’s perception of support within their family had no moderating effects.

Conclusions: findings indicate that the focus of prevention should be shifted beyond just families of adolescents who are experiencing psychosis and/or have high “at-risk” profiles, to families of adolescents exposed to ALEs. Targeted support for parents to help reduce parental stress and burden, and help foster protective family environments even in the face of ALEs, is an important avenue for reducing the risk of paranoid beliefs in adolescents. Further research is required to better understand how to offset the deleterious effect of bullying on paranoid beliefs in adolescents.
0586-7614
1486-1493
Kingston, Jessica L.
0a6d15b9-5390-4996-91c9-ef4be2bde1b7
Ellett, Lyn
96482ea6-04b6-4a50-a7ec-ae0a3abc20ca
Thompson, Elizabeth C.
7916d8a4-690d-4202-85cf-93a9e22379a8
Gaudiano, Brandon A.
ef11b69f-16d5-4e80-8d43-8059804717e2
Krkovic, Katarina
b3778182-56a5-40b7-b6a8-910bedd0f2ad
Kingston, Jessica L.
0a6d15b9-5390-4996-91c9-ef4be2bde1b7
Ellett, Lyn
96482ea6-04b6-4a50-a7ec-ae0a3abc20ca
Thompson, Elizabeth C.
7916d8a4-690d-4202-85cf-93a9e22379a8
Gaudiano, Brandon A.
ef11b69f-16d5-4e80-8d43-8059804717e2
Krkovic, Katarina
b3778182-56a5-40b7-b6a8-910bedd0f2ad

Kingston, Jessica L., Ellett, Lyn, Thompson, Elizabeth C., Gaudiano, Brandon A. and Krkovic, Katarina (2023) A child-parent dyad study on adolescent paranoia and the influence of adverse life events, bullying, parenting stress and family support. Schizophrenia Bulletin, 49 (6), 1486-1493, [sbad119]. (doi:10.1093/schbul/sbad119).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: paranoid beliefs commonly occur in the general adolescent population. Exposure to adverse life events (ALEs) and/or bullying are important environmental risk factors. The extent to which others, especially parents, are available to help a young person cope with stressful situations may offset this risk.

Study design: a cross-sectional adolescent-parent dyad design (n = 142 pairs) was used to test whether an adolescent’s perception of being supported by their family, and/or the parent’s perception of stress and burden in their parenting role, moderated the association between environmental risk and adolescent paranoid beliefs.

Study results: moderation analysis indicated that ALEs were significantly associated with adolescent paranoid beliefs when parents reported high stress and burden in their parenting role. Conversely, at low and moderate levels of parental stress, ALEs were unrelated to paranoid beliefs. Bullying was strongly associated with paranoia, with no moderation effects. The adolescent’s perception of support within their family had no moderating effects.

Conclusions: findings indicate that the focus of prevention should be shifted beyond just families of adolescents who are experiencing psychosis and/or have high “at-risk” profiles, to families of adolescents exposed to ALEs. Targeted support for parents to help reduce parental stress and burden, and help foster protective family environments even in the face of ALEs, is an important avenue for reducing the risk of paranoid beliefs in adolescents. Further research is required to better understand how to offset the deleterious effect of bullying on paranoid beliefs in adolescents.

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More information

e-pub ahead of print date: 25 August 2023
Published date: 1 November 2023
Additional Information: © The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Maryland Psychiatric Research Center.

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 481829
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/481829
ISSN: 0586-7614
PURE UUID: fd2334fa-faea-4dc9-8635-cba2f4493f71
ORCID for Lyn Ellett: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-6051-3604

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Date deposited: 11 Sep 2023 16:34
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:10

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Contributors

Author: Jessica L. Kingston
Author: Lyn Ellett ORCID iD
Author: Elizabeth C. Thompson
Author: Brandon A. Gaudiano
Author: Katarina Krkovic

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