Author:
Berg Ian,Butler Alan,McGuire Ralph
Abstract
It has been found that young people suffering from school phobia, particularly those of secondary school age in Britain, tend to be the youngest in their family (Hersov, 1960; Smith, 1970). This paper reports an investigation carried out in an attempt to confirm and extend this observation. A hundred school-phobic youngsters admitted to Highlands, a psychiatric in-patient unit for adolescents, were looked at from the point of view of order in the sibship; in this respect they were compared with 91 non-school-phobic children suffering from neurotic or conduct disorders admitted to the same hospital unit and with 127 randomly selected normal secondary school children stratified for age, sex and social class. The state of excessive dependency which appears to exist between mothers and their children in school phobia, even in early adolescence (Berg and McGuire, 1971) may be partly due to the circumstance of the affected individual being a younger child in the family.
Publisher
Royal College of Psychiatrists
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health
Reference14 articles.
1. Similar results were obtained when the sexes were analysed separately; thus, the mean values of Slater's index were in the 52 boys 0.5733 and in the 48 girls 0.6188.
2. Two years' admission to a regional adolescent psychiatry unit;Berg;Med. Officer,1970
3. SCHOOL PHOBIA?ITS CLASSIFICATION AND RELATIONSHIP TO DEPENDENCY
4. Preliminary Communication: 2: The Highlands Dependency Questionnaire (HDQ): An administered version for use with mothers of school children
5. Are School Phobic Adolescents Overdependent?
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