1988
DOI: 10.1111/j.1360-0443.1988.tb00518.x
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A Comparison of the Home and Social Environments of Children of Alcoholic and Non‐alcoholic Parents

Abstract: The home environments of 32 children of alcoholic parents and 22 children with neither parent alcoholic are compared. The home environments of the children of alcoholics show diminished global functioning. In particular they are characterized by marital conflict, parent-child conflict, poor adaptive functioning an the part of the parents and in some cases by physical abuse. Out of the 32 children with alcoholic parents, a majority of the children received 1 or more DSM-III diagnoses. A comparison of the home e… Show more

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Cited by 124 publications
(58 citation statements)
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References 38 publications
(23 reference statements)
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“…The literature on children of alcoholics documents the clustering in these high-risk families of nonalcohol-specifi c risk factors for offspring alcohol-related problems, including numerous indicators of an unstable home environment also linked to risk for CSA. Among these are high levels of confl ict and disorganization in the family, marital distress, and low cohesion among family members (Hussong and Chassin, 1997;Jacob and Leonard, 1994;Reich et al, 1988;West and Prinz, 1987). In such an overall dysfunctional environment, parents are less likely to provide the support and monitoring that serve as protective factors against exposure to CSA and other adverse events.…”
Section: Risk Factors Common To Csa and Alcohol-related Problemsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The literature on children of alcoholics documents the clustering in these high-risk families of nonalcohol-specifi c risk factors for offspring alcohol-related problems, including numerous indicators of an unstable home environment also linked to risk for CSA. Among these are high levels of confl ict and disorganization in the family, marital distress, and low cohesion among family members (Hussong and Chassin, 1997;Jacob and Leonard, 1994;Reich et al, 1988;West and Prinz, 1987). In such an overall dysfunctional environment, parents are less likely to provide the support and monitoring that serve as protective factors against exposure to CSA and other adverse events.…”
Section: Risk Factors Common To Csa and Alcohol-related Problemsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The family environment of children of alcoholics may be an important factor in the development of inattention/hyperactivity. For instance, Reich, Earls, and Powell (1988) found that the home environment of children of alcoholics was characterized by increased marital conflict and parent-child conflict. However, marital conflict is also associated with child antisocial behaviors (Grych & Fincham, 2001) and specificity to ADHD symptoms again remains unclear because of mixed findings across studies (Johnston & Mash, 2001).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Reich et al [10] found that children of alcoholics who reported positive relationships with their parents were in turn significantly less disturbed than children of alcoholics who did not experience positive relationships with their parents. Thus, future research should explore parent-child relationships and resiliency in order to design interventions that may assist in promoting better outcomes.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Parental addictions often result in or exacerbate other adverse childhood experiences such as parental divorce [7,10,11], parental unemployment [12], and household poverty [12]. Children raised by parents with addictions are also at increased risk for child abuse [5,7].…”
Section: International Journal Of Population Researchmentioning
confidence: 99%