1993
DOI: 10.1080/00221325.1993.9914718
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Abstract: This study investigated hospitalized adolescents (57 girls; 46 boys; mean age = 14 years, 8 months) and their fathers and mothers to ascertain the degree of correspondence (by gender of parent and child) on ratings of total symptoms and of internalizing and externalizing psychopathology. Parents (especially mothers) reported higher levels of symptom severity than their offspring; girls' ratings were more severe than boys'. Whereas interparent correspondence was essentially the same in ratings of daughters, mot… Show more

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Cited by 29 publications
(46 citation statements)
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“…Contrary to the pattern seen in population samples, studies of clinical samples in several societies have reported higher scores on the CBCL than the YSR (e.g., Ferdinand et al 2006;Salbach-Andrae et al 2009;Thurber and Osborn 1993). However, adolescents reporting significantly more internalizing but not more externalizing disorders than their parents has been reported in several clinical samples (e.g., Cantwell et al 1997;Edelbrock et al 1986).…”
Section: Cross-cultural Perspectives On Agreement Regarding Adolescenmentioning
confidence: 48%
“…Contrary to the pattern seen in population samples, studies of clinical samples in several societies have reported higher scores on the CBCL than the YSR (e.g., Ferdinand et al 2006;Salbach-Andrae et al 2009;Thurber and Osborn 1993). However, adolescents reporting significantly more internalizing but not more externalizing disorders than their parents has been reported in several clinical samples (e.g., Cantwell et al 1997;Edelbrock et al 1986).…”
Section: Cross-cultural Perspectives On Agreement Regarding Adolescenmentioning
confidence: 48%
“…(e.g., Edelbrock, Costello, Dulcan, Conover, & Kalas, 1986;Forehand, Frame, Wierson, Armistead, & Kempton, 1991;Kolko & Kazdin, 1993;Rey, Schrader, & Morris-Yates, 1992;Yeh & Weisz, 2001). Second, clinical youth have generally been found to report fewer symptoms than their parents (e.g., Mokros et al, 1987;Thurber & Osborn, 1992). And, finally, agreement rates are greater between parents and children not receiving services than they are between parent and children receiving services (e.g., Achenbach et al, 1987;Butler, McKay, & Dickens, 1995;Kolko & Kazdin, 1993;Mokros et al, 1987).…”
mentioning
confidence: 93%
“…In non-clinical samples (e.g., Stanger & Lewis, 1993;Thomas, Forehand, Armistead, Weirson, & Frauber, 1990;Verhulst & van der Ende, 1992) and clinical samples of various presenting problems (e.g., Kazdin, French, & Unis, 1983;Mokros, Poznanski, Grossman, & Freeman, 1987;Thurber & Osborn, 1992;Thurber & Snow, 1990) parent and child reports are consistently found to deviate one from another. In fact, meta-analytic research has found that on the average parent and child reports correlate at approximately .30 (Achenbach, McConaughty, & Howell, 1987).…”
mentioning
confidence: 96%
“…A few studies involved clinically referred samples and invariantly document a reverse discrepancy, where youth ratings of problem severity are lower than parent ratings [27,31,37]. In clinically referred children, parents are likely to emphasize the severity of the difficulties which is often likely to result in a ceiling effect, whereas the young persons' ratings are usually correspondingly lower.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%