The moderating role of rejection sensitivity in the relationship
between emotional maltreatment and borderline symptoms.
Reflective function mediates the relationship
between emotional maltreatment and borderline pathology in adolescents: A preliminary investigation.
Not exact matches
Research within clinical populations consistently finds that girls are more often abused than boys, although research focused on the broader population of community youth has not shown such gender differences in rates of physical
maltreatment.72 Female offenders typically are abused before their first offense.73 Among girls in the California juvenile justice system, 92 percent report some form of
emotional, physical, or sexual abuse.74 Self - reported victimization rates among boys in the juvenile justice system are considerably lower, though boys may be more likely than girls to underreport certain forms of abuse.75 Some studies report abuse rates for males
between 25 percent and 31 percent, while others report rates of 10 percent for sexual abuse and 47 percent for physical abuse.76 Closer comparison reveals that delinquent males and females tend to report different types of traumas as well.
For example, previous self - report findings indicated that fearful attachment mediated associations
between childhood trauma (a composite including
emotional and physical forms of
maltreatment) and psychosis - proneness [8].
He focused on
emotional, cognitive, and neurobiological mechanisms that underlie the association
between childhood
maltreatment and child and adolescent mental disorders.
Distinguishing
between poor / dysfunctional parenting and child
emotional maltreatment.
The second aim was to analyze criticism and
emotional over-involvement as mediators in a relationship
between a mother's history of
maltreatment and her parenting behaviors.
In Study 2,
emotional reactivity and maladaptive responses to distress mediated the association
between child
maltreatment and both internalizing and externalizing psychopathology.