3 research outputs found

    The direction of effects between perceived parental behavioral control and psychological control and adolescentsā€™ self-reported GAD and SAD symptoms

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    This study examined the direction of effects and age and sex differences between adolescentsā€™ perceptions of parental behavioral and psychological control and adolescentsā€™ self-reports of generalized anxiety disorder (GAD) and separation anxiety disorder (SAD) symptoms. The study focused on 1,313 Dutch adolescents (early-to-middle cohort nĀ =Ā 923, 70.3%; middle-to-late cohort nĀ =Ā 390, 29.7%) from the general population. A multi-group, structural equation model was employed to analyze the direction of the effects between behavioral control, psychological control and GAD and SAD symptoms for the adolescent cohorts. The current study demonstrated that a unidirectional child effect model of the adolescentsā€™ GAD and SAD symptoms predicting parental control best described the data. Additionally, adolescent GAD and SAD symptoms were stronger and more systematically related to psychological control than to behavioral control. With regard to ageā€“sex differences, anxiety symptoms almost systematically predicted parental control over time for the early adolescent boys, whereas no significant differences were found between the late adolescent boys and girls

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