26 results on '"Zucker, Robert A."'
Search Results
2. Parent, family, and neighborhood effects on the development of child substance use and other psychopathology from preschool to the start of adulthood
- Author
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Buu, Anne, DiPiazza, Cydney, Wang, Jing, Puttler, Leon I., Fitzgerald, Hiram E., and Zucker, Robert A.
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Neighborhood -- Influence -- Research ,Child development -- Research ,Drugs and youth -- Research ,Health ,Psychology and mental health ,Influence ,Research - Abstract
Objective: We examined the long-term effects of childhood familial and neighborhood risk on adolescent substance use and psychiatric symptomatology. Method: This study used data from an ongoing 2-decade long study that recruited alcoholic and neighborhood control families through fathers' drunk-driving records and door-to-door canvassing in a four county area. The sample included 220 male, initially 3- to 5-year-old children of the participant families, who received in-home assessments at baseline and thereafter at 3-year intervals. Parental lifetime psychopathology and offspring symptomatology at ages 18-20 were assessed by semistructured diagnostic interviews. Census tract variables were used to indicate neighborhood characteristics. Results: The isomorphic parental symptomatology predicted offspring psychopathology. For marijuana-use disorder, major depressive disorder, and nicotine dependence, the other parental comorbidities were also significant predictors. Neighborhood residential instability in childhood contributed to the development of late adolescent alcohol-use disorder, marijuana-use disorder, major depressive disorder, antisocial personality disorder, and nicotine-dependence symptomatology. Although lower family socioeconomic status in childhood contributed to more adolescent marijuana-use disorder, major depressive disorder, and nicotine-dependence symptoms, neighborhood socioeconomic status did not predict adolescent psychopathology. Longitudinal changes in neighborhood environments from early childhood to adolescence had significant effects on alcohol-use disorder, marijuana-use disorder, and major depressive disorder symptoms in late adolescence. A higher frequency of family mobility from early childhood to adolescence predicted more nicotine-dependence symptoms in late adolescence. Conclusions: Findings indicate that parental psychopathology, family socioeconomic status, and neighborhood residential instability are all important risk factors for the development of substance-use disorder and other comorbid psychopathology. Intervention programming might effectively use these early parental psychopathology indicators to identify risk and might target community activity to stabilize the social environment and provide youth services to counteract the effects of family transience., CHARACTERIZATION OF NEIGHBORHOOD effects on children's behavioral or mental health problems can provide important information for prevention programming as well as policy making. Existing studies addressing this issue are mostly [...]
- Published
- 2009
3. Trajectories of childhood aggression and inattention/hyperactivity: differential effects on substance abuse in adolescence
- Author
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Jester, Jennifer M., Nigg, Joel T., Buu, Anne, Puttler, Leon I., Glass, Jennifer M., Heitzeg, Mary M., Fitzgerald, Hiram E., and Zucker, Robert A.
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Substance abusers -- Psychological aspects ,Substance abusers -- Research ,Aggressiveness (Psychology) in children -- Research ,Children -- Behavior ,Children -- Research ,Family and marriage ,Psychology and mental health - Abstract
335 children of alcoholic and nonalcoholic fathers were examined to study the relation between childhood behavior trajectories and adolescent substance abuse. Findings suggested that children with both aggression and inattention/hyperactivity were at an increased risk of substance abuse when compared to children with only inattention/hyperactivity and also predicted an earlier onset of drug use in adolescent, independent of aggression.
- Published
- 2008
4. Pooling data from multiple longitudinal studies: the role of item response theory in integrative data analysis
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Curran, Patrick J., Hussong, Andrea M., Cai, Li, Huang, Wenjing, Chassin, Laurie, Sher, Kenneth J., and Zucker, Robert A.
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Human growth -- Measurement ,Developmental psychology -- Research ,Psychology -- Methods ,Psychology -- Evaluation ,Psychology and mental health - Abstract
There are a number of significant challenges researchers encounter when studying development over an extended period of time, including subject attrition, the changing of measurement structures across groups and developmental periods, and the need to invest substantial time and money. Integrative data analysis is an emerging set of methodologies that allows researchers to overcome many of the challenges of single-sample designs through the pooling of data drawn from multiple existing developmental studies. This approach is characterized by a host of advantages, but this also introduces several new complexities that must be addressed prior to broad adoption by developmental researchers. In this article, the authors focus on methods for fitting measurement models and creating scale scores using data drawn from multiple longitudinal studies. The authors present findings from the analysis of repeated measures of internalizing symptomatology that were pooled from three existing developmental studies. The authors describe and demonstrate each step in the analysis and conclude with a discussion of potential limitations and directions for future research. Keywords: integrative data analysis, pooling data, growth modeling, item response theory
- Published
- 2008
5. Depressive symptoms over time in women partners of men with and without alcohol problems
- Author
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Nolen-Hoeksema, Susan, Wong, Maria M., Fitzgerald, Hiram, and Zucker, Robert A.
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Alcohol-related disorders -- Research ,Depression, Mental -- Research ,Women -- Research ,Women -- Psychological aspects ,Psychology and mental health - Abstract
In a sample of 202 adult women and their families, the authors examined the effects of their male partners' alcohol problems and antisociality, the women's alcohol problems and antisociality, family conflict, and offspring behavioral problems on the women's depressive symptoms over a 3-year period. The women's antisociality and alcohol problems were more strongly related to family conflict, offspring behavioral problems, and the women's depressive symptoms than were the men's antisociality and alcohol problems. The women's antisociality and family conflict most strongly predicted increases in the women's depressive symptoms over time. In addition, family conflict mediated the effects of maternal antisociality on the women's depressive symptoms. Keywords: women, depression, alcoholism, antisociality
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- 2006
6. Behavioral control and resiliency in the onset of alcohol and illicit drug use: a prospective study from preschool to adolescence
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Wong, Maria M., Nigg, Joel T., Zucker, Robert A., Puttler, Leon I., Fitzgerald, Hiram E., Jester, Jennifer M., Glass, Jennifer M., and Adams, Kenneth
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Behaviorism (Psychology) -- Research ,Substance abuse -- Psychological aspects ,Substance abuse -- Research ,Alcohol and youth -- Psychological aspects ,Alcohol and youth -- Research ,Resilience (Personality trait) -- Research ,Health ,Psychology and mental health - Abstract
The developmental trajectories of behavioral control and resiliency from early childhood to adolescence and their effects on early onset of substance use were examined. Behavioral control is the tendency to express or contain one's impulses and behaviors. Resiliency is the ability to adapt flexibly one's characteristic level of control in response to the environment. Study participants were 514 children of alcoholics and matched controls from a longitudinal community sample (Time 1 age in years: =4.32, =0.89). Children with slower rates of increase in behavioral control were more likely to use alcohol and other drugs in adolescence. Children with higher initial levels of resiliency were less likely to begin using alcohol.
- Published
- 2006
7. Poor response inhibition as a predictor of problem drinking and illicit drug use in adolescents at risk for alcoholism and other substance use disorders
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Nigg, Joel T., Wong, Maria M., Martel, Michelle M., Jester, Jennifer M., Puttler, Leon I., Glass, Jennifer M., Adams, Kenneth M., Fitzgerald, Hiram E., and Zucker, Robert A.
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Inhibition (Neurophysiology) -- Research ,Alcohol and youth -- Research ,Alcohol and youth -- Health aspects ,Alcohol and youth -- Risk factors ,Drugs and youth -- Research ,Drugs and youth -- Health aspects ,Drugs and youth -- Risk factors ,Teenagers -- Research ,Teenagers -- Psychological aspects ,Teenagers -- Health aspects ,Youth -- Research ,Youth -- Psychological aspects ,Youth -- Health aspects ,Family and marriage ,Psychology and mental health - Published
- 2006
8. Marital interaction in alcoholic and nonalcoholic couples: alcoholic subtype variations and wives' alcoholism status
- Author
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Floyd, Frank J., Daugherty, Michelle Klotz, Fitzgerald, Hiram E., Cranford, James A., and Zucker, Robert A.
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Psychology and mental health - Abstract
The authors examined problem-solving marital interactions of alcoholic and nonalcoholic couples (N = 132). Four alcoholic groups (husband alcoholic with antisocial personality disorder or not, paired with alcoholic or nonalcoholic wives) were compared with each other and with a both-spouses-nonalcoholic group. Consistent with the alcoholic subtypes hypothesis, couples with an antisocial alcoholic husband had higher levels of hostile behavior regardless of wives' alcoholism status. In contrast, rates of positive behaviors and the ratio of positive to negative behaviors were greatest among couples in which either both or neither of the spouses had alcoholic diagnoses and were lowest among alcoholic husbands with nonalcoholic wives. Discussion focuses on possible mechanisms linking antisocial alcoholism and discrepant alcoholic diagnoses to poorer marital outcomes. Keywords: alcohol and marriage, alcoholic subtypes, discordant alcoholism diagnoses, antisocial alcoholism, marital interaction
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- 2006
9. Social competence in children of alcoholic parents over time
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Hussong, Andrea M., Fitzgerald, Hiram E., Zucker, Robert A., Wong, Maria M., and Puttler, Leon I.
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Parent and child -- Research ,Drinking of alcoholic beverages -- Influence ,Social skills in children -- Psychological aspects ,Social skills in children -- Research ,Psychology and mental health - Abstract
In the current study, the authors tested the hypothesis that children of alcoholic parents (COAs) show deficits in social competence that begin in early childhood and escalate through middle adolescence. Teachers, parents, and children reported on the social competence of COAs and matched controls in a community sample assessed from ages 6 to 15. Hierarchical linear growth models revealed different patterns of change in social competence across development as a function of the reporter of various indicators of competence. Moreover, female COAs showed deficits in social competence in early childhood that receded in adolescence and that varied across subtypes of parent alcoholism. Implications of these findings for understanding the development of social competence in children, and at-risk children in particular, are discussed. Keywords: parent alcoholism, social competence, social development, peer relationship, at-risk youth
- Published
- 2005
10. Individual and partner predictors of recovery from alcohol-use disorder over a nine-year interval: findings from a community sample of alcoholic married men *
- Author
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McAweeney, Mary J., Zucker, Robert A., Fitzgerald, Hiram E., Puttler, Leon I., and Wong, Maria M.
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Alcoholism -- Research ,Married men -- Research -- Health aspects -- Psychological aspects ,Health ,Psychology and mental health ,Psychological aspects ,Research ,Health aspects - Abstract
Objective: Numerous studies have focused on the predictors of recovery in persons with alcohol use disorder (AUD). Most have been retrospective and have measured only predictors of short-term recovery after the completion of treatment. This prospective study evaluates the role of psychological and social factors in a community sample of both alcoholics and their partners in predicting recovery over a 9-year interval. Method: Alcoholic diagnostic status and life functioning of 134 community-recruited, initially coupled men meeting criteria for a 3-year Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fourth Edition, AUD diagnosis at baseline were assessed over the 9-year period. Their partners also were assessed. Prediction involved comparing those who still had an AUD diagnosis at 9-year follow-up against those who no longer met AUD criteria. Results: Predictors of recovery included number of experiences with treatment, education, number of years of intervening recovery over the follow-up period, partner baseline AUD status and partner's social support network. Alcoholics' initial severity of drinking did not predict long-term outcome. Furthermore, recovered men's partners decreased their AUD in the interim, whereas nonremitters' partners increased their AUD. The findings highlight the transitions in and out of AUD, with 62% of the men having stable drinking patterns of either remission or unremitting AUD diagnosis over the entire follow-up period. Conclusions: This study demonstrated the importance of interpersonal factors in maintaining AUD or promoting recovery. Consideration of partner characteristics and the marital context as factors in the recovery process is essential. Future research should examine the predictors of recovery in women, in adolescents and in racial groups other than white. (J. Stud. Alcohol 66: 220-228, 2005), ALTHOUGH THERE HAS BEEN a moderate amount of research on the predictors of recovery from an alcohol use disorder (AUD), most studies have been retrospective and/or have measured only predictors [...]
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- 2005
11. Neuropsychological executive functioning in children at elevated risk for alcoholism: findings in early adolescence
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Nigg, Joel T., Poon, Edwin, Fitzgerald, Hiram E., Glass, Jennifer M., Wong, Maria M., Jester, Jennifer M., Puttler, Leon I., Adams, Kenneth M., and Zucker, Robert A.
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Alcoholism -- Risk factors ,Adolescent psychopathology -- Research ,Neuropsychology -- Research ,Psychology and mental health - Abstract
One component of individual risk for alcoholism may involve cognitive vulnerabilities prodromal to alcoholism onset. This prospective study of 198 boys followed between 3 and 14 years of age evaluated neurocognitive functioning across three groups who varied in familial risk for future alcoholism. Measures of intelligence, reward-response, and a battery of neuropsychological executive and cognitive inhibitory measures were used. Executive functioning weaknesses were greater in families with alcoholism but no antisocial comorbidity. IQ and reward-response weaknesses were associated with familial antisocial alcoholism. Executive function effects were clearest for response inhibition, response speed, and symbol-digit modalities, Results suggest that executive deficits are not part of the highest risk, antisocial pathway to alcoholism but that some executive function weaknesses may contribute to secondary risk pathway.
- Published
- 2004
12. Predictors of aggression across three generations among sons of alcoholics: relationships involving grandparental and parental alcoholism, child aggression, marital aggression and parenting practices *
- Author
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Fuller, Bret E., Chermack, Stephen T., Cruise, Karen A., Kirsch, Elisabeth, Fitzgerald, Hiram E., and Zucker, Robert A.
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Personality -- Genetic aspects ,Aggressiveness (Psychology) -- Risk factors ,Alcoholics -- Behavior ,Aggressiveness (Psychology) in children -- Risk factors ,Health ,Psychology and mental health ,Genetic aspects ,Risk factors ,Behavior - Abstract
Objective: This longitudinal study uses a three-generation database involving measures of grandparental and parental alcohol use disorder (AUD), marital aggression and aggression to offspring to predict early and later childhood aggression of third generation offspring. Given the importance of aggressive, undercontrolled behavior in the etiology of alcoholism, the purpose of this study was to construct a statistical model of intergenerational aggression and alcoholism among family members. Method: Participants were a population-based sample of 186 young sons of alcoholics and both biological parents and 120 nonsubstance abusing families and their age-matched sons drawn from the same neighborhoods. Extensive family data were collected at baseline and at 6 years postbaseline. Structural equation modeling evaluated retrospective and prospective relationships between grandparental and parental predictors of the sons' childhood aggression when they were 3-5 and 9-11 years of age. Results: The final model showed that grandparental marital aggression predicted development of parental antisocial behavior, which predicted parental alcoholism and marital aggression and partially mediated level of child aggression among their sons as preschoolers. Significant autostabilities in level of child aggression, parental AUD and marital aggression were present in families over the 6-year interval. Marital aggression was a more important predictor of son's preschool aggression; direct parental aggression to the child was more important at 9-11. Child aggression at 3-5 also was a partial mediator of level of parent-to-child aggression at 9-11. Conclusions: Results indicate continuity of aggression across three generations and also indicate that the child's pathway into risk for later AUD is not simply mediated by parental alcoholism, but is carried by other comorbid aspects of family functioning, in particular aggression., NUMEROUS STUDIES have documented an association between alcohol use and problems and the perpetuation of both domestic violence and child abuse in American families. Estimates indicate that alcohol use is [...]
- Published
- 2003
13. Developmental trajectories of disruptive behavior problems among sons of alcoholics: effects of parent psychopathology, family conflict, and child undercontrol
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Loukas, Alexandra, Fitzgerald, Hiram E., Zucker, Robert A., and Krull, Jennifer L.
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Parent and child -- Health aspects ,Parent and child -- Psychological aspects ,Alcoholism -- Social aspects ,Alcoholism -- Health aspects ,Adolescent psychopathology -- Research ,Psychology and mental health - Abstract
This study examined trajectories of disruptive behavior problems from preschool to early adolescence in 302 boys from a community-recruited sample of high-risk families. Growth modeling showed that paternal alcoholism was associated with elevated levels of sons' disruptive behavior problems. Family conflict predicted more disruptive behaviors at school entry and a slower rate of decline in such problems. Parent antisocial personality disorder (ASPD) exacerbated the effects of high preschool levels of sons' undercontrol on level of disruptive behaviors at school entry; this effect became progressively stronger across time. Low levels of undercontrol protected sons of ASPD parents from experiencing heightened levels of disruptive behaviors both at school entry and increasingly as sons grew older. Implications for subsequent maladjustment are discussed.
- Published
- 2003
14. Pushing through solid rock: words of wisdom for clinicians from four patients with life-threatening conditions
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Zucker, Robert
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Chronically ill -- Health aspects ,Chronically ill -- Psychological aspects ,Psychotherapy -- Case studies ,Psychology and mental health - Abstract
Four subjects living with profoundly debilitating and life-threatening illnesses reflect on how psychotherapy has contributed to their ability to cope and survive. With frankness and eloquence they address issues related to cancer, heart disease, fibromyalgia, and AIDS. Keywords: chronic illness; case history; personal narrative
- Published
- 2002
15. The role of family influences in development and risk
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Ellis, Deborah A., Zucker, Robert A., and Fitzgerald, Hiram E.
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Alcoholism -- Causes of -- Psychological aspects ,Children -- Alcohol use ,Health ,Psychology and mental health ,Sociology and social work ,Alcohol use ,Psychological aspects ,Causes of - Abstract
Researchers and clinicians have known for some time that children of alcoholics (COA's) exhibit elevated rates of psychopathology. For example, COA's are approximately four to six times as likely as [...]
- Published
- 1997
16. The development of alcoholic subtypes: risk variation among alcoholic families during the early childhood years
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Zucker, Robert A., Ellis, Deborah A., Bingham, C. Raymond, and Fitzgerald, Hiram E.
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Alcoholism -- Varieties ,Alcoholics -- Family ,Health ,Psychology and mental health ,Sociology and social work ,Varieties ,Family - Abstract
Lifetime differences in antisocial behavior among alcoholic men historically have been useful in distinguishing alcoholic subtypes. However, the usefulness Of this subtyping strategy for identifying differences in families that may [...]
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- 1996
17. Articulating subtype differences in self and relational experience among alcoholic men using structural analysis of social behavior
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Ichiyama, Michael A., Zucker, Robert A., Fitzgerald, Hiram E., and Bingham, C. Raymond
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Self-perception -- Research ,Alcoholics -- Psychological aspects ,Interpersonal relations -- Psychological aspects ,Psychology and mental health - Abstract
L. Benjamin's (1984) structural analysis of social behavior (SASB) system was used as the organizing framework within which to characterize the phenomenology of self and other relationship experience among subtypes of alcoholic men. Within the context of a community-based study of psychopathology, groups of antisocial alcoholic (AAL), nonantisocial alcoholic (NAAL), and nonalcoholic (control) men completed ratings of their introject (self-concept) and spousal experience. Group differences in demography and psychopathology provided strong support for subtype variations among alcoholic men that could not be attributed to global differences in adaptive functioning. SASB data showed consistency in circumplex ordering across the groups in ratings of self-experience and in ratings of the spousal relationship. AAL men were the most self-neglecting, blaming, and least trusting, and control men were the most relationally connected, with NAAL men falling in between. Despite the importance of the subtyping distinction, in some areas, alcoholism, regardless of subtype, was the core differentiating factor.
- Published
- 1996
18. Early intervention in the path to alcohol problems through conduct problems: treatment involvement and child behavior change
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Nye, Cynthia L., Zucker, Robert A., and Fitzgerald, Hiram E.
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Behavior disorders in children -- Prevention ,Alcoholism -- Prevention ,Children of alcoholics -- Psychological aspects ,Operant behavior -- Research ,Psychology and mental health - Abstract
A program for the prevention of conduct problems among preschool-age sons of alcoholic fathers was implemented to interrupt what is likely to be a major mediating factor in the development of alcoholism in later years. A population-based sample of 42 families participated in a 10-month intervention involving parent training and marital problem solving. Differences in treatment outcome were examined, with the expectation that level of treatment involvement - entailing both level of participation and level of investment - would account for variability in child outcome at termination. Significant changes in positive and negative child behaviors were observed only within the group of families who completed the program and where the mothers demonstrated a higher level of treatment investment. When pretreatment child, parent, and family predictors of child behavior change were accounted for, subsequent analyses identified maternal treatment investment as a significant predictor of child outcome.
- Published
- 1995
19. Parent-child interactions in alcoholic and nonalcoholic families
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Whipple, Ellen M., Fitzgerald, Hiram E., and Zucker, Robert A.
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Children of alcoholics -- Psychological aspects ,Parent and child -- Psychological aspects ,Child care -- Psychological aspects ,Health ,Psychology and mental health - Abstract
A community-recruited sample of alcoholic and nonalcoholic families was video-taped in a standardized play task involving parents and their preschool-aged sons. Microanalyses revealed that alcoholic families had lower dyadic synchrony, that parents were viewed as less able to engage their children, and that the coders liked the control parents and children more. Variations in the parent-child interactions are discussed.
- Published
- 1995
20. Cognitive and motoric functioning of sons of alcoholic fathers and controls:the early childhood years
- Author
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Noll, Robert B., Zucker, Robert A., Fitzgerald, Hiram E., and Curtis, W. John
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Motor ability -- Research ,Children of alcoholics -- Psychological aspects ,Cognition in children -- Physiological aspects ,Psychology and mental health - Abstract
This study compared cognitive and motoric abilities of male preschoolers with alcoholic fathers with matched community comparison boys. Despite meticulous neighborhood searches, socioeconomic status (SES) and Home Observation for Measurement of the Environment (HOME) scores of control families were significantly higher than alcoholic families. Among high-risk boys, overall developmental quotient, fine motor, and personal/social development were significantly less advanced than for controls when SES and HOME scores were not considered. In analyses of developmental data when HOME scores were considered as a covariate, only personal/social development remained significantly different. Findings suggest that paternal alcohol problems are related to cognitive development of their preschool sons, primarily if they impact on aspects of family environment related to intellectual abilities.
- Published
- 1992
21. Time spent with child and parental agreement about preschool children's behavior
- Author
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Fitzgerald, Hiram E., Zucker, Robert A., Maguin, Eugene T., and Reider, Eve E.
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Perception -- Research ,Behavior disorders in children -- Research ,Child psychology -- Research ,Preschool children -- Psychological aspects ,Health ,Psychology and mental health - Abstract
Although there is a common core of agreement in parental perceptions of their preschool-age sons' problem behavior, perceptions of 107 parents became more concordant as fathers increased the amount of time they spent with their sons. At least within the context of a sample who were at risk for developing abuse of alcohol or other substances and antisocial behavior, fathers who spent less time with their sons perceived them to be less troubled than mothers perceived them to be.
- Published
- 1994
22. Characterizing the life stressors of children of alcoholic parents
- Author
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Hussong, Andrea M., Bauer, Daniel J., Chassin, Laurie, Wenjing Huang, Sher, Kenneth J., and Zucker, Robert A.
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Stress in children -- Research ,Children of alcoholics -- Psychological aspects ,Domestic relations -- Research ,Family and marriage ,Psychology and mental health - Published
- 2008
23. Parental Alcoholism and Co-Occurring Antisocial Behavior: Prospective Relationships to Externalizing Behavior Problems in their Young Sons [1]
- Author
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Loukas, Alexandra, Fitzgerald, Hiram E., Zucker, Robert A., and Eye, Alexander von
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Alcoholism -- Psychological aspects ,Antisocial behavior -- Psychological aspects ,Children -- Psychological aspects ,Behavior disorders in children -- Psychological aspects ,Parent and child -- Psychological aspects ,Psychology and mental health - Published
- 2001
24. Gender Differences in the Relationships among SES, Family History of Alcohol Disorders and Alcohol Dependence(*)
- Author
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CURRAN, GEOFFREY M., STOLTENBERG, SCOTT F., HILL, ELIZABETH M., MUDD, SHARON A., BLOW, FREDERIC C., and ZUCKER, ROBERT A.
- Subjects
Alcoholism -- Research ,Family -- Research ,Health ,Psychology and mental health - Abstract
Objective: Potential moderator and mediator roles of several measures of socioeconomic status (SES) were investigated for the relationship between a family history of alcoholism (FH) and alcohol dependence symptoms in adulthood. Method: These analyses were performed with a sample of 931 men and 385 women participating in studies at the Alcohol Research Center, University of Michigan. Hierarchical multiple regression equations were used to assess whether SES mediated and moderated relationships between FH and alcohol dependence symptoms. Results: In general, measures of SES (education, occupation, personal and household income) were more important predictors of alcohol dependence symptoms among men, while FH was a stronger predictor among women. In the female sample, measures Of personal and household income interacted with family history such that the influence of family history on adult alcohol dependence symptoms was significantly stronger among low income women. Measures of SES and FH were additively related to alcohol dependence symptoms among men. Education partially meditated the relationship between family history and alcohol dependence symptoms among men, indicating that the influence of family history on subsequent alcohol problems among men may be partially due to familial alcoholism's negative effect on educational attainment. Conclusions: The results of this study suggest the influence of FH on alcohol dependence varies according to SES and gender, and point to the usefulness of examining potential moderators and mediators of family history of alcohol use disorders. (J. Stud. Alcohol 60: 825-832, 1999), THE OBSERVATION that alcoholism is more frequently found in some families than in others is not new (e.g., Blueler, 1955). Likewise, inverse relationships between socioeconomic status (SES) and alcoholism and [...]
- Published
- 1999
25. Insomnia, Self-Medication, and Relapse to Alcoholism
- Author
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Brower, Kirk J., Aldrich, Michael S., Robinson, Elizabeth A.R., Zucker, Robert A., and Greden, John F.
- Subjects
Insomnia -- Care and treatment ,Insomniacs -- Alcohol use ,Alcoholics -- Care and treatment ,Alcoholism -- Health aspects ,Health ,Psychology and mental health - Abstract
Objective: This study was an investigation of the frequencies of insomnia and its self-medication with alcohol in a group of alcoholic patients, as well as the relationship of these variables to alcoholic relapse. Method: The subjects were 172 men and women receiving treatment for alcohol dependence. They completed a sleep questionnaire, measures of alcohol problem severity and depression severity, and polysomnography after at least 2 weeks of abstinence. Results: On the basis of eight items from the Sleep Disorders Questionnaire, 61% of the subjects were classified as having symptomatic insomnia during the 6 months before treatment entry. Compared to patients without insomnia, patients with insomnia were more likely to report frequent alcohol use for sleep (55% versus 28%), had significantly worse polysomnographic measures of sleep continuity, and had more severe alcohol dependence and depression. Among 74 alcoholics who were followed a mean of 5 months after treatment, 60% with baseline insomnia versus 30% without baseline insomnia relapsed to any use of alcohol, a significant difference. Insomnia remained a robust predictor of relapse after application of logistic regression analysis to control for other variables. A history of self-medicating insomnia with alcohol did not significantly predict subsequent relapse. Conclusions: The majority of alcoholic patients entering treatment reported insomnia symptoms. Given the potential link between insomnia and relapse, routine questions about sleep in clinical and research settings are warranted. (Am J Psychiatry 2001; 158:399-404)
- Published
- 2001
26. Validity issues with the Family Environment Scale: psychometric resolution and research application with alcoholic families
- Author
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Sanford, Keith, Bingham, C. Raymond, and Zucker, Robert A.
- Subjects
Alcoholism -- Research ,Family -- Effect of alcoholism on ,Psychometrics -- Research ,Psychology and mental health - Abstract
The Family Environment Scale (FES) has been the subject of debate as to its validity, which may have discouraged some researcher from using this tool. The FES has been assessed using three types of families, alcoholic families with and without antisocial tendencies, and control families. There is support for six FES scales which show good convergent validity, and there is backing for their internal psychometric properties. The results also indicate that four FES scales should be treated with caution.
- Published
- 1999
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