AD/HD symptoms and conduct problems: similarities and differences in maternal perceptions
AD/HD symptoms and conduct problems: similarities and differences in maternal perceptions
Several theories attempt to explain the high co-occurrence of Attention Deficit/ Hyperactivity Disorder (AD/HD) and Conduct Problems (CP). A strong possibility is that AD/HD behaviours lead to the development of CP, due to family coercive interaction patterns, maintained through parental false beliefs regarding child problem behaviour. We compared maternal perceptions about AD/HD behaviors and CP, and the possible reactions elicited by such behaviours. The sample consisted of 317 mothers of boys and girls aged 4–6. Four versions of The Parental Account of the Causes of Childhood Problems Questionnaire were used, in which a vignette was ascribed to either a boy or a girl displaying some of the major AD/HD behaviours or CP. The results showed that CP were perceived as significantly more severe than AD/HD behaviours. Moreover, AD/HD behaviours were attributed to biological causes more often than CP, and less strict rearing practices were chosen for AD/HD symptoms. Our findings provide evidence that mothers usually perceive AD/HD behaviours and CP as separate entities and may behave accordingly with their children.
AD/HD - conduct problems - maternal perceptions - attributions - disruptive behaviour
460-474
Maniadaki, Katerina
abea7293-9988-49ec-a4ae-257763b61e51
Sonuga-Barke, Edmund.J.S.
bc80bf95-6cf9-4c76-a09d-eaaf0b717635
Kakouros, Efthymios
6fd44048-0183-4b05-bb4f-331a7cc29076
Karaba, Rania
ebc02b9e-eb8a-4e2d-a247-6b1d018ced07
August 2006
Maniadaki, Katerina
abea7293-9988-49ec-a4ae-257763b61e51
Sonuga-Barke, Edmund.J.S.
bc80bf95-6cf9-4c76-a09d-eaaf0b717635
Kakouros, Efthymios
6fd44048-0183-4b05-bb4f-331a7cc29076
Karaba, Rania
ebc02b9e-eb8a-4e2d-a247-6b1d018ced07
Maniadaki, Katerina, Sonuga-Barke, Edmund.J.S., Kakouros, Efthymios and Karaba, Rania
(2006)
AD/HD symptoms and conduct problems: similarities and differences in maternal perceptions.
Journal of Child and Family Studies, 15 (4), .
(doi:10.1007/s10826-006-9037-x).
Abstract
Several theories attempt to explain the high co-occurrence of Attention Deficit/ Hyperactivity Disorder (AD/HD) and Conduct Problems (CP). A strong possibility is that AD/HD behaviours lead to the development of CP, due to family coercive interaction patterns, maintained through parental false beliefs regarding child problem behaviour. We compared maternal perceptions about AD/HD behaviors and CP, and the possible reactions elicited by such behaviours. The sample consisted of 317 mothers of boys and girls aged 4–6. Four versions of The Parental Account of the Causes of Childhood Problems Questionnaire were used, in which a vignette was ascribed to either a boy or a girl displaying some of the major AD/HD behaviours or CP. The results showed that CP were perceived as significantly more severe than AD/HD behaviours. Moreover, AD/HD behaviours were attributed to biological causes more often than CP, and less strict rearing practices were chosen for AD/HD symptoms. Our findings provide evidence that mothers usually perceive AD/HD behaviours and CP as separate entities and may behave accordingly with their children.
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Published date: August 2006
Keywords:
AD/HD - conduct problems - maternal perceptions - attributions - disruptive behaviour
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 54722
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/54722
ISSN: 1062-1024
PURE UUID: 5f263e60-2e1d-4dca-b764-c4f752b20036
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Date deposited: 29 Jul 2008
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 10:49
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Contributors
Author:
Katerina Maniadaki
Author:
Edmund.J.S. Sonuga-Barke
Author:
Efthymios Kakouros
Author:
Rania Karaba
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