1. Parental bonding during childhood affects stress-coping ability and stress reaction.
- Author
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Ohtaki Y, Ohi Y, Suzuki S, Usami K, Sasahara S, and Matsuzaki I
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Adaptation, Psychological physiology, Adult Survivors of Child Adverse Events psychology, Object Attachment, Parent-Child Relations, Sense of Coherence physiology, Stress, Psychological physiopathology
- Abstract
An online survey examined the effects of parental bonding during childhood on adult workers' stress-coping ability (Sense of Coherence) and stress reactions (General Health Questionnaire and Self-Rating Depression Scale). Participants who completed the questionnaire were grouped into optimal bonding and poor bonding groups. Analyses of covariance by gender with age as a covariate were conducted for the Sense of Coherence, General Health Questionnaire, and Self-Rating Depression Scale scores for 9525 participants. For both genders, the scores of the poor bonding group were significantly lower for the Sense of Coherence and significantly higher for the General Health Questionnaire and Self-Rating Depression Scale compared to those of the optimal bonding group.
- Published
- 2017
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