Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-v9fdk Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-17T19:08:14.446Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Are School Phobic Adolescents Overdependent?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 January 2018

Ian Berg
Affiliation:
Highlands, Scalebor Park Hospital, Burley in Wharfedale, Yorkshire
Ralph McGuire
Affiliation:
University of Leeds

Extract

In this study, 42 school phobic youngsters aged 11 to 15 were investigated to find out if they were exceptionally dependent, particularly on their mothers, as had repeatedly been asserted in connection with similar cases, often without adequate supporting evidence of an objective nature (Berg, 1970). The Highlands Dependency Questionnaire (H.D.Q.) was administered to their mothers around the time they were accepted for admission to an adolescent psychiatric in-patient unit. The Questionnaire had previously been found to measure at least two unrelated sorts of dependency, represented by a sociability factor (I) and an immaturity factor (III) with satisfactory reliability and validity; this emerged when a principal component factor analysis was performed on the results of applying it to the mothers of a randomly selected sample of 68 secondary school children from the general population, stratified for age, sex and social class (Berg et al., 1971). Data on 14 variables was processed on the University of Leeds English Electric KDF9 computer, using a system of standard programmes (Hamilton et al., 1965). In addition to the two sets of factor scores which were calculated using actual raw score weights, two corresponding sets of subscale scores were calculated using approximate raw score weights; correlations between factor and subscale scores in the control group had been found to be: r = ·87 for sociability and r = ·84 for immaturity (Berg et al., 1971), whereas in 19 youngsters out of the school phobic group, looked at in another context, they were: r = ·51 for sociability (perhaps explained by a divergence between at least two tendencies which have different emphasis in the factor and subscale scores) and r = ·95 for immaturity. The criteria adopted for the diagnosis of school phobia had been given previously when 29 school phobic cases with similar clinical features were reported in some detail (Berg et al., 1969).

Type
Abstract
Copyright
Copyright © The Royal College of Psychiatrists, 1971 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Barker, P. (1968). ‘The in-patient treatment of school refusal.’ Brit. J. med. Psychol., 41, 381–7.Google Scholar
Berg, I. (1970). ‘A follow-up study of school phobic adolescents admitted to an in-patient unit.’ J. Child Psychol. Psychiat, 11, 3747.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Berg, I., Nichols, K., and Pritchard, C. (1969). ‘School phobia—its classification and relationship to depenency.’ J. Child Psychol. Psychiat., 10, 123–41.Google Scholar
Berg, I., McGuire, R., and Whelan, E. (1971). ‘The Highlands Dependency Questionnaire (H.D.Q.) for use in school children.’ Psychological Medicine, In Press.Google Scholar
Hamilton, M., McGuire, R., and Goodman, M. J. (1965). ‘The P.L.U.S. system of programmes: an integrated system of computer programmes for biological data.’ Brit. J. math. stat. Psychol., 18, 265–6.Google Scholar
Kerr, T. A., Schapira, K., Roth, M., 'and Garside, R. F. (1970). ‘The relationship between the Maudsley Personality Inventory and the course of affective disorders.’ Brit. J. Psychiat., 116, 1119.Google Scholar
Marks, I. M. (1969). Fears and Phobias, London.Google Scholar
Schapira, K., Kerr, T. A., and Roth, M. (1970). ‘Phobias and affective illness.’ Brit. J. Psychiat. 117, 2532.Google Scholar
Submit a response

eLetters

No eLetters have been published for this article.