The impact of inflated responsibility and maternal reassurance on child behaviour.

Badham, Rachel (2012) The impact of inflated responsibility and maternal reassurance on child behaviour. Doctoral thesis, University of East Anglia.

[thumbnail of 2012BadhamRPhD.pdf]
Preview
PDF
Download (1MB) | Preview

Abstract

Background: Cognitive models of OCD propose that cognitions such as ‘inflated responsibility’ have a
causal role in the persistence of OCD symptoms. Research is mounting to support the applicability of
these models to children, although the models do not take into account family context. Parents are often
involved in accommodating their child’s OCD through the provision of reassurance. This study aimed to
investigate the relationship between maternal inflated responsibility and maternal reassurance and
secondly, the relationship between maternal reassurance and child OCD-behaviours.
Method: Sixty children and their mothers were recruited from schools and the children completed a
sweet sorting task in which their responsibility was inflated. Maternal responsibility was manipulated
across three conditions; ‘high inflation’, ‘low inflation’ and ‘control’ (where mothers were not present
during the sorting task). Child and maternal behaviours were examined from video-recordings of the task.
It was hypothesised that mothers whose responsibility was inflated would offer more reassurance to their
children and furthermore, their children would seek more reassurance and engage in more OCD-type
behaviours.
Results: The findings did not support the hypotheses as the manipulation did not have a significant effect
on maternal reassurance giving. Contrary to the hypothesis, there was a trend for mothers in the ‘low’
group to offer more reassurance to their child than mothers in the ‘high’ group. No differences were found
between groups for child behaviours. Children in the control group took significantly longer to complete
the task than the others.
Conclusions: The study was not able to provide support for a causal role of maternal reassurance in
relation to their child’s behaviour. Limitations of the manipulation that may account for these findings are
identified and suggestions are made for methodological improvements. Successfully demonstrating causal
mechanisms between parental behaviours and child OCD-behaviours would have significant implications
for the prevention and treatment of childhood OCD.

Item Type: Thesis (Doctoral)
Faculty \ School: Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences > Norwich Medical School
Depositing User: Users 7377 not found.
Date Deposited: 04 Mar 2014 12:25
Last Modified: 04 Mar 2014 12:25
URI: https://ueaeprints.uea.ac.uk/id/eprint/47882
DOI:

Actions (login required)

View Item View Item