The effects of maternal depression on their perception of emotional and behavioral problems of their internationally adopted children




Liskola Krista, Raaska Hanna, Lapinleimu Helena, Lipsanen Jari, Sinkkonen Jari, Elovainio Marko

PublisherBMC

2021

Child and Adolescent Psychiatry and Mental Health

CHILD AND ADOLESCENT PSYCHIATRY AND MENTAL HEALTH

CHILD ADOL PSYCH MEN

ARTN 41

15

1

9

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1186/s13034-021-00396-0

https://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/66942192



Background

Even though child psychopathology assessment guidelines emphasize comprehensive multi-method, multimodal, and multi-informant methodologies, maternal-report symptom-rating scales often serve as the predominant source of information. Research has shown that parental mood symptomatology affects their reports of their offspring's psychopathology. For example, the depression-distortion hypothesis suggests that maternal depression promotes a negative bias in mothers' perceptions of their children's behavioral and emotional problems. We investigated this difference of perception between adoptive mothers and internationally adopted children. Most previous studies suffer from the potential bias caused by the fact that parents and children share genetic risks.

Methods

Data were derived from the Finnish Adoption (FinAdo) survey study (a subsample of adopted children aged between 9 and 12 years, n = 222). The Child Behavior Checklist (CBCL) was used to assess emotional and behavioral problems and competences of the adopted children. The CBCL was filled in by the adopted children and the adoptive mothers, respectively. Maternal depressive symptoms were measured using the short version of the General Health Questionnaire.

Results

On average, mothers reported less total CBCL symptoms in their children than the children themselves (0.25 vs 0.38, p-value < 0.01 for difference). Mothers' depressive symptoms moderated the discrepancy in reporting internalizing symptoms (beta = - 0.14 and p-value 0.01 for interaction) and the total symptoms scores (beta = - 0.22 and p-value < 0.001 for interaction) and externalizing symptoms in girls in the CBCL.

Limitations

The major limitation of our study is its cross-sectional design and the fact that we only collected data in the form of questionnaires.

Conclusions

The results of our research support the depression-distortion hypothesis concerning the association of maternal depressive symptoms and child internalizing symptoms and externalizing symptoms in girls in a sample without genetic bias


Last updated on 2024-26-11 at 16:45