The impact of childhood parental loss on risk for mood, anxiety and substance use disorders in a population-based sample of male twins

Abstract


Previous studies have identified the relationship between parental loss and psychopathology later in life. However, this relationship varied depending on the kind of loss, the parent involved, and the type of psychopathology. In the present study, we examined the association between parental loss (any loss, death, and separation) during childhood and lifetime risk for seven common psychiatric and substance use disorders in a sample of 2605 male twins from the Virginia population-based twin registry. Using structural equation modeling (SEM), we also examined the extent to which the influence of parental loss contributes to adult psychopathology. Parental separation was associated with a wide range of adult psychopathology, whereas parental death was specifically associated with phobia and alcohol dependence. Maternal and paternal separation were almost equally associated with most forms of psychopathology. SEM suggested that parental loss accounted for about 10% of the variance of adult psychopathology, of which parental separation had the strongest impacts on risk for depression and drug abuse/dependence (11% of the total variance). Our findings suggest that early parental separation has stronger and wider effects on adult psychopathology than parental death.



Other articles

Child work and labour among orphaned and abandoned children in five low and middle income countries

Background: The care and protection of the estimated 143,000,000 orphaned and abandoned children (OAC) worldwide is of great…

Read more

DIFFERENCES IN SELF-ESTEEM OF ORPHAN CHILDREN AND CHILDREN LIVING WITH THEIR PARENTS

The current research investigated differences in self-esteem of orphan children and children living with both parents in…

Read more

The Experience Of Mental States Of Adolescents Orphans

The article describes the issue of development of mental states of orphaned children being brought up in institutionalized…

Read more

Posttraumatic Stress in AIDS-Orphaned Children Exposed to High Levels of Trauma: The Protective Role of Perceived Social Support

Poor urban children in South Africa are exposed to multiple community traumas, but AIDS-orphaned children are at particular…

Read more