Parent psychopathology and offspring mental disorders in the WHO World Mental Health Surveys

ABSTRACT


BACKGROUND:

Associations between specific parent and offspring mental disorders are likely to have been overestimated in studies that have failed to control for parent comorbidity.


AIMS:

To examine the associations of parent with respondent disorders.


METHOD:

Data come from the World Health Organization (WHO) World Mental Health Surveys (n = 51 507). Respondent disorders were assessed with the Composite International Diagnostic Interview and parent disorders with informant-based Family History Research Diagnostic Criteria interviews.


RESULTS:

Although virtually all parent disorders examined (major depressive, generalized anxiety, panic, substance and antisocial behavior disorders and suicidality) were significantly associated with offspring disorders in multivariate analyses, little specificity was found. Comorbid parent disorders had significant sub-additive associations with offspring disorders. Population-attributable risk proportions for parent disorders were 12.4% across all offspring disorders, generally higher in high- and upper-middle- than low-/lower-middle-income countries, and consistently higher for behavior (11.0-19.9%) than other (7.1-14.0%) disorders.


CONCLUSIONS:

Parent psychopathology is a robust non-specific predictor associated with a substantial proportion of offspring disorders. British Journal of Psychiatry. 200(4), 290-299.

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