TY - JOUR
T1 - Multi-Informant Ratings of Childhood Limited Prosocial Emotions
T2 - Mother, Father, and Teacher Perspectives
AU - Castagna, Peter J.
AU - Waschbusch, Daniel A.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 Society of Clinical Child and Adolescent Psychology, Division 53, American Psychological Association. All Rights Reserved.
PY - 2023
Y1 - 2023
N2 - Objective: Modest agreement between mothers’, fathers’, and teachers’ reports of child psychopathology can cause diagnostic ambiguity. Despite this, there is little research on informant perspectives of youth’s limited prosocial emotions (LPEs). We examined the relationship between mother-, father-, and teacher-reported LPE in a clinical sample of elementary school-aged children. Method: The sample included 207 primarily Caucasian (n = 175, 84.5%) children (136 boys; 65.7%) aged 6–13 years (M = 8.35, SD = 2.04) referred to an outpatient child diagnostic clinic focused on externalizing problems. We report the percentage of youth meeting LPE criteria as a function of informant perspective(s). Utilizing standard scores, we report distributions of informant dyads in agreement/disagreement regarding child LPE, followed up by polynomial regressions to further interrogate the relationship between mother-, father-, and teacher-reported LPE as it relates to conduct problems (CPs). Results: The prevalence of child LPE was approximately twice as large when compared to those reported in community samples; mothers and fathers generally agreed on their child’s LPE symptoms (55% agreement). Higher-order nonlinear interactions between mothers and fathers, as well as parents and teachers, emerged; discrepancies between informants, characterized by low levels of LPE reported by the child’s mother, were predictive of youth at the highest risk for CPs. Conclusions: Our findings emphasize the clinical utility of gathering multiple reports of LPE when serious CPs are suspected. It may be beneficial for clinicians to give significant consideration to teacher reported LPE when interpreting multiple-informant reports of LPE.
AB - Objective: Modest agreement between mothers’, fathers’, and teachers’ reports of child psychopathology can cause diagnostic ambiguity. Despite this, there is little research on informant perspectives of youth’s limited prosocial emotions (LPEs). We examined the relationship between mother-, father-, and teacher-reported LPE in a clinical sample of elementary school-aged children. Method: The sample included 207 primarily Caucasian (n = 175, 84.5%) children (136 boys; 65.7%) aged 6–13 years (M = 8.35, SD = 2.04) referred to an outpatient child diagnostic clinic focused on externalizing problems. We report the percentage of youth meeting LPE criteria as a function of informant perspective(s). Utilizing standard scores, we report distributions of informant dyads in agreement/disagreement regarding child LPE, followed up by polynomial regressions to further interrogate the relationship between mother-, father-, and teacher-reported LPE as it relates to conduct problems (CPs). Results: The prevalence of child LPE was approximately twice as large when compared to those reported in community samples; mothers and fathers generally agreed on their child’s LPE symptoms (55% agreement). Higher-order nonlinear interactions between mothers and fathers, as well as parents and teachers, emerged; discrepancies between informants, characterized by low levels of LPE reported by the child’s mother, were predictive of youth at the highest risk for CPs. Conclusions: Our findings emphasize the clinical utility of gathering multiple reports of LPE when serious CPs are suspected. It may be beneficial for clinicians to give significant consideration to teacher reported LPE when interpreting multiple-informant reports of LPE.
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U2 - 10.1080/15374416.2022.2151452
DO - 10.1080/15374416.2022.2151452
M3 - Article
C2 - 36473070
AN - SCOPUS:85144010369
SN - 1537-4416
VL - 52
SP - 119
EP - 133
JO - Journal of Clinical Child and Adolescent Psychology
JF - Journal of Clinical Child and Adolescent Psychology
IS - 1
ER -