TY - JOUR
T1 - Mother, father, and teacher agreement on victimization and bullying in children with psychiatric disorders
AU - Mayes, Susan Dickerson
AU - Calhoun, Susan L.
AU - Siddiqui, Farhat
AU - Baweja, Raman
AU - Waschbusch, Daniel A.
AU - Mattison, Richard E.
AU - Babinski, Dara E.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2017 Springer Publishing Company.
PY - 2017
Y1 - 2017
N2 - Bullying is a significant international problem, and parent-teacher agreement on identifying perpetrators and victims is poor in general population studies. The goal of our study is to assess informant discrepancies in children with mental health disorders. Parents and teachers completed the Pediatric Behavior Scale as part of a diagnostic evaluation for 1,723 children (ages 2-16 years) referred to a psychiatry clinic over the past 10 years. Mother and father bullying and victimization ratings on the Pediatric Behavior Scale were similar, but parent-teacher agreement was poor. Half of parents considered their child a victim, twice the percentage for teachers. Parents were 1.2 times more likely than teachers to perceive their child as a bully. Most parents reported their child was a victim or bully, whereas most teachers reported the children were neither. For both parents and teachers, victim and bully percentages for our psychiatric sample were twice as high as in general population studies. Clinicians should obtain information from multiple informants and consider that teacher report is likely to be lower than parent report.
AB - Bullying is a significant international problem, and parent-teacher agreement on identifying perpetrators and victims is poor in general population studies. The goal of our study is to assess informant discrepancies in children with mental health disorders. Parents and teachers completed the Pediatric Behavior Scale as part of a diagnostic evaluation for 1,723 children (ages 2-16 years) referred to a psychiatry clinic over the past 10 years. Mother and father bullying and victimization ratings on the Pediatric Behavior Scale were similar, but parent-teacher agreement was poor. Half of parents considered their child a victim, twice the percentage for teachers. Parents were 1.2 times more likely than teachers to perceive their child as a bully. Most parents reported their child was a victim or bully, whereas most teachers reported the children were neither. For both parents and teachers, victim and bully percentages for our psychiatric sample were twice as high as in general population studies. Clinicians should obtain information from multiple informants and consider that teacher report is likely to be lower than parent report.
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U2 - 10.1891/0886-6708.VV-D-16-00025
DO - 10.1891/0886-6708.VV-D-16-00025
M3 - Article
C2 - 28516854
AN - SCOPUS:85021875995
SN - 0886-6708
VL - 32
SP - 466
EP - 478
JO - Violence and victims
JF - Violence and victims
IS - 3
ER -