Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-l7hp2 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-02T19:15:29.393Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Perceived parental rearing style, parental divorce and transsexualism: a controlled study

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 July 2009

Peggy T. Cohen-Kettenis
Affiliation:
Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, University of Utrecht and the Department of Psychiatry at the Amsterdam Psychiatric Centre, Vrije Universiteit, The Netherlands
Willem A. Arrindell*
Affiliation:
Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, University of Utrecht and the Department of Psychiatry at the Amsterdam Psychiatric Centre, Vrije Universiteit, The Netherlands
*
1Address for correspondence: Dr Willem A. Arrindell, Vrije Universiteit, Faculty of Medicine, Department of Psychiatry at the Amsterdam Psychiatric Centre, Valeriusplein 9, 1075 BG Amsterdam, The Netherlands.

Synopsis

The parental representations of male-to-female and female-to-male transsexuals were rated using the EMBU inventory. Scores on the measure were compared against ratings returned by controls of similar biological sex, matched on age, educational level and number of female siblings in an ANCOVA design. In line with previous findings by Parker & Barr (1982), who studied male-to-female transsexuals only, these patients were found not to differ from the male controls in their scoring of their mothers, but did score their fathers as less emotionally warm, more rejecting and more protective. Extending the findings by Parker & Barr (1982), female-to-male transsexuals rated both parents as more rejecting and less emotionally warm, but only their mothers as more protective than their female control equivalents rated theirs. Parental divorce distinguished both patient groups from controls, although further analyses revealed this not to imply more parental absence in patients than in controls. Male and female transsexuals differed from each other in some respects (e.g. lower scores on parental emotional warmth and higher scores on maternal rejection for the female patients), while being comparable in other respects (e.g. parental divorce).

Type
Original Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1990

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

American Psychiatric Association (1980). Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, 3rd edn. American Psychiatric Association: Washington, D.C.Google Scholar
American Psychiatric Association (1987). Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, 3rd edn, revised. American Psychiatric Association: Washington, D.C.Google Scholar
Arrindell, W. A. & van der Ende, J. (1984). Replicability and invariance of dimensions of parental rearing behaviour: further Dutch experiences with the EMBU. Personality and Individual Differences 5, 671682.Google Scholar
Arrindell, W. A., Emmelkamp, P. M. G., Brilman, E. & Monsma, A. (1983 a). Psychometric evaluation of an inventory for assessment of parental rearing practices; a Dutch form of the EMBU. Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica 67, 163177.Google Scholar
Arrindell, W. A., Emmelkamp, P. M. G., Monsma, A. & Brilman, E. (1983 b). The role of perceived parental rearing practices in the aetiology of phobic disorders: a controlled study. British Journal of Psychiatry 143, 183187.Google Scholar
Arrindell, W. A., Perris, C., Perris, H., Eisemann, M., van der Ende, J. & von Knorring, L. (1986 a). Cross-national invariance of dimensions of parental rearing behaviour: comparison of psychometric data of Swedish depressives and healthy subjects with Dutch target ratings on the EMBU. British Journal of Psychiatry 148, 305309.Google Scholar
Arrindell, W. A., Perris, C., Eisemann, M., Perris, H., van der Ende, J., Ross, M., Benjaminsen, S., Gaszner, P. & del Vecchio, M. (1986 b). Cross-national generalizability of patterns of parental rearing behaviour: invariance of EMBU dimensional representations of healthy subjects from Australia, Denmark, Hungary, Italy and the Netherlands. Personality and Individual Differences 7, 103112.Google Scholar
Arrindell, W. A., Perris, H., Denia, M., van der Ende, J., Perris, C., Kokkevi, A., Anasagasti, J. I. & Eisemann, M. (1988). The constancy of structure of perceived parental rearing style in Greek and Spanish subjects as compared with the Dutch. International Journal of Psychology 23, 323.Google Scholar
Arrindell, W. A., Kwee, M. G. T., Methorst, G. J., van der Ende, J., Pol, E. & Moritz, B. J. M. (1989 a). Perceived parental rearing styles of agoraphobic and socially phobic inpatients. British Journal of Psychiatry 155, 525535.Google Scholar
Arrindell, W. A., Methorst, G. J., Kwee, M. G. T., van der Ende, J., Pol, E. & Moritz, B. J. M. (1989 b). Expanding the validity of a measure of reported parental rearing practices with psychiatric inpatients; further Dutch experiences with the EMBU. Personality and Individual Differences 10, 493500.Google Scholar
Block, J. (1971). Lives Through Time. Bancroft: Berkeley, Ca.Google Scholar
Bugaighis, M. A., Schumm, W. R., Bollman, S. R. & Jurich, A. P. (1983). Locus of control and marital satisfaction. Journal of Psychology 114, 275279.Google Scholar
Burbach, D. J. & Borduin, C. M. (1986). Parent-child relations and the etiology of depression: a review of methods and findings. Clinical Psychology Review 6, 133153.Google Scholar
Burger, G. K., Armentrout, J. A. & Rapfogel, R. G. (1975). Recalled parental behavior and objective personality measures: a canonical analysis. Journal of Personality Assessment 39, 514522.Google Scholar
Central Bureau for Statistics (CBS), afd. Bevolkingsstatistieken (1988, 07). Echtscheidingen, 1983–1987 (Divorces, 1983–1987). Maandstatistiek van de Bevolking, Staatsuitgeverij: The Hague, The Netherlands.Google Scholar
Coates, S. (1985). Extreme boyhood femininity: overview and new research findings. In Sexuality: New Perspectives (ed. DeFries, Z., Friedman, R. C. and Corn, R.), pp. 101124. Greenwood Press: Westport, CT.Google Scholar
Cohen, J. (1988). Statistical Power Analysis for the Behavioral Sciences (Second Edition). Lawrence Erlbaum Associates: Hillsdale, New Jersey.Google Scholar
Eysenck, H. J. (1975). Who needs a random sample? Bulletin of the British Psychological Society 28, 195198.Google Scholar
Eysenck, H. J. (1979). Personality factors in a random sample of the population. Psychological Reports 44, 10231027.Google Scholar
Gerlsma, C., Emmelkamp, P. M. G. & Arrindell, W. A. (1990). Anxiety, depression and perception of early parenting: a metaanalysis. Clinical Psychology Review (in the press).Google Scholar
Green, R. (1974). Sexual Identity Conflict in Children and Adults. Basic Books: New York.Google Scholar
Green, R. (1987). The ‘Sissy Boy Syndrome’ and the Development of Homosexuality. Yale University Press: New Haven, CT.Google Scholar
Halverson, C. F. Jr. (1988). Remembering your parents: reflections on the retrospective method. Journal of Personality 56, 435443.Google Scholar
Huston, T. L., Surra, C. A., Fitzgerald, N. M. & Cate, R. M. (1981). From courtship to marriage: mate selection as an interpersonal process. In Personal Relationships. 2: Developing Personal Relationships (ed Duck, S. and Gilmour, R.), pp. 5388. Academic Press: London.Google Scholar
Kagel, S. A. & Schilling, K. M. (1985). Sexual identification and gender identity among father-absent males. Sex Roles 13, 357370.Google Scholar
Lewinsohn, P. M. & Rosenbaum, M. (1987). Recall of parental behavior by acute depressives, remitted depressives, and nondepressives. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 52, 611619.Google Scholar
Lewis, R. A. & Spanier, G. B. (1979). Theorizing about the quality and stability of marriage. In Contemporary Theories About the Family: Research-based Theories, Volume I (ed. Burr, W. R., Hill, R., Nye, F. I. and Reiss, I. L.), pp. 268294. Free Press: New York.Google Scholar
Markman, H. J., Floyd, F. & Dickson-Markman, F. (1982). Towards a model for the prediction and primary prevention of marital and family distress and dissolution. In Personal Relationships. 4: Dissolving Personal Relationships (ed. Duck, S.), pp. 233261. Academic Press: London.Google Scholar
McCrae, R. R. & Costa, P. T. Jr. (1988 a). Recalled parent child relations and adult personality. Journal of Personality 56, 417434.Google Scholar
McCrae, R. R. & Costa, P. T. Jr. (1988 b). Do parental influences matter? A reply to Halverson. Journal of Personality 56, 445449.Google Scholar
Parker, G. (1984). The measurement of pathogenic parental style and its relevance to psychiatric disorder. Social Psychiatry 19, 7581.Google Scholar
Parker, G. & Barr, R. (1982). Parental representations of transsexuals. Archives of Sexual Behavior 11, 221230.Google Scholar
Parker, G., Tupling, H. & Brown, L. B. (1979). A Parental Bonding Instrument. British Journal of Medical Psychology 52, 110.Google Scholar
Perris, C., Jacobsson, L., Lindström, H., von Knorring, L. & Perris, H. (1980). Development of a new inventory for assessing memories of parental rearing behaviour. Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica 61, 265274.Google Scholar
Perris, C., Arrindell, W. A., Perris, H., Eisemann, M.van der Ende, J. & von Knorring, L. (1986). Perceived depriving parental rearing and depression. British Journal of Psychiatry 148, 170175.Google Scholar
Rekers, G. A., Mead, S. L., Rosen, A. C. & Brigham, S. L. (1983). Family correlates of male childhood gender disturbance. Journal of Genetic Psychology 142, 3142.Google Scholar
Richman, J. A. & Flaherty, J. A. (1987). Adult psychosocial assets and depressive mood over time: effects of internalized childhood attachments. Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease 175, 703712.Google Scholar
Roberts, C. W., Green, R., Williams, K. & Goodman, M. (1987). Boyhood gender identity development: a statistical contrast of two family groups. Developmental Psychology 23, 544557.Google Scholar
Ross, M. W. (1986). Causes of gender dysphoria: how does transsexualism develop and why? In Transsexualism and Sex Reassignment (ed. Walters, W. A. W. and Ross, M. W.), pp. 1625. Oxford University Press: Melbourne.Google Scholar
Rutter, M. (1988). Longitudinal data in the study of causal processes: some uses and some pitfalls. In Studies of Psychosocial Risk: The Power of Longitudinal Data (ed. Rutter, M.), pp. 128. Cambridge University Press: Cambridge.Google Scholar
Šipová, I. & Brzek, A. (1983). Parental and interpersonal relationships of transsexual and masculine and feminine homosexual men. Journal of Homosexuality 9, 7585.Google Scholar
Solyom, L., Silberfeld, M. & Solyom, C. (1976). Maternal overprotection in the etiology of agoraphobia. Canadian Psychiatric Association Journal 21, 109113.Google Scholar
Waring, E. M., Reddon, J. R., Corvinelli, M., Chalmers, W. S. & Vander Laan, R. (1983). Marital intimacy and mood states in a nonclinical sample. Journal of Psychology 115, 263273.Google Scholar
Yarrow, M. R., Campbell, J. D. & Burton, R. V. (1970). Recollections of childhood: a study of the retrospective method. Monographs of the Society for Research in Child Development 35 (5, Serial No. 138).Google Scholar