Parent and child psychological factors in pediatric syncope and other somatic symptoms. Blount, R., Morris, J., Cheng, P., Campbell, R., & Brown, R. J Consult Clin Psychol, 72(4):597–604, August, 2004.
Paper doi abstract bibtex The authors examined associations among parental and child adjustment, child syncope, somatic, and school problems. Participants were children (N = 56) ages 7-18 years with syncope. Measures included syncope severity, parental distress, and children's internalizing symptoms. For children diagnosed negative for neurocardiogenic syncope (NCS), their fathers' and their own psychological symptoms were positively associated with the severity of syncope, whereas their mothers' functioning was negatively associated with the severity of syncope. Also, for the negative NCS group, fathers' psychological functioning was associated with children's nonsyncope somatic complaints but not with their school problems. For the positive NCS group, few significant father-child associations were found, but several significant positive associations were revealed between mothers' psychological symptoms and their children's syncope as well as somatic and school problems.
@article{blount_parent_2004,
title = {Parent and child psychological factors in pediatric syncope and other somatic symptoms.},
volume = {72},
issn = {0022-006X},
url = {https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15301644},
doi = {10.1037/0022-006X.72.4.597},
abstract = {The authors examined associations among parental and child adjustment, child syncope, somatic, and school problems. Participants were children (N = 56) ages 7-18 years with syncope. Measures included syncope severity, parental distress, and children's internalizing symptoms. For children diagnosed negative for neurocardiogenic syncope (NCS), their fathers' and their own psychological symptoms were positively associated with the severity of syncope, whereas their mothers' functioning was negatively associated with the severity of syncope. Also, for the negative NCS group, fathers' psychological functioning was associated with children's nonsyncope somatic complaints but not with their school problems. For the positive NCS group, few significant father-child associations were found, but several significant positive associations were revealed between mothers' psychological symptoms and their children's syncope as well as somatic and school problems.},
language = {eng},
number = {4},
journal = {J Consult Clin Psychol},
author = {Blount, RL and Morris, JAB and Cheng, PS and Campbell, RM and Brown, RT},
month = aug,
year = {2004},
keywords = {Syncope},
pages = {597--604}
}
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