golomb1994. BDP và mẹ conpdf
golomb1994. BDP và mẹ conpdf
golomb1994. BDP và mẹ conpdf
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JAPA 4212
ANATHGoLohlB, PH.D.
PAhlELA LUDOLPH, PH.D.
DREWWESTEN,PH.D.
M. JUDITHBLOCK,PH.D.
PATTRICEMAURER
F. CHARLESWISS, PH.D.
This study was partially funded by a grant from the University Center
for the Child and the Family, The University of hfichigan; a Rackham Disser-
tation Grant and a Rackham Faculty Grant, The University of hfichigan; and
525
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526 ANATH GOLOhlD E T AL.
Methods
Subjects were the mothers of adolescent girls with a diagnosis
of borderline personality disorder (BPD)(N = 13)and mothers
of adolescent girls with normal functioning (N = 13). T h e
‘The results of this preliminary study are reported (Golomb, 1990). Our
study included a third comparison group of mothers of nonborderline psychi-
atrically hospitalized adolescents. As described in the discussion section of
this paper, the composition of this third group was problematic, however,
since many of these teenage girls had been diagnosed with other personality
disorders, for which deficient maternal empathy would also likely be invoked
as an etiological factor, and several had borderline siblings. Thus, we report
here only comparisons of the mothers of borderline and normal adolescents.
Borderline Adolescents
Borderline adolescents were identified at two inpatient psychi-
atric settings. T h e borderline adolescents ranged in age from
fourteen to eighteen at the time of initial contact with a member
of the research team. Excluded from this study were adolescent
inpatients with chronic psychosis, clear evidence of neuropa-
thology (such as documented epilepsy or severe head injury),
I.Q. scores below 70, or medical problems that would compli-
cate diagnosis or psychological testing.
The diagnosis of borderline personality disorder was made
on the basis of the Diagnostic Interview for Borderlines (DIB)
(Gunderson et al., 1981). T h e DIB provides a highly reliable
and valid way of assessing the presence or absence of symptoms,
character traits, and relationship patterns associated with BPD
(Cornell et al., 1983; Gunderson and Kolb, 1978; McManus et
al., 1984) and has been shown to distinguish DSM-ZZZ diagnosed
borderlines with sensitivity and specificity typically above .80
(Armelius et al., 1985). Research by McManus et al. (1984) and
Ludolph et al. (1990) has documented that adolescent border-
line patients can be discriminated with the DIB. As in other
research using the DIB, patients were defined as meeting crite-
ria for BPD by obtaining DIB scores greater than or equal to
seven. Methods and reliability of diagnosis are described more
thoroughly elsewhere (Westen et al., 1990; Ludolph et al.,
1990).
Normal Adolescents
Normal adolescent girls were located through a local public
high school whose students, like the hospitalized patients, tend
Groups of Mothers
All the mothers of the previously identified female adolescents
were contacted to see if they would be interested in participat-
ing in this research. Only mothers of females were invited to
participate in this study, to avoid potentially important gender
confounds in the mother-child relationship. T h e time of data
collection after the child’s discharge ranged from six weeks to
six years. Waiting for at least six weeks following the daughter’s
discharge before collecting data insured that the mother would
be past the initial crisis of her daughter’s hospitalization. We
were able to locate 25 mothers of the 43 discharged borderlines
(58%). Of these, 15 agreed to participate (60%).We were able
to locate 19 mothers of the 26 normal adolescents (73%). Of
The Intemiew
Maternal empathy was assessed through the Parental Aware-
ness Measure (Newberger, 1980). This measure investigates
,how parents think about a wide range of issues deemed integral
to parenting. For example, parents are asked to explain in de-
tail hoiv they conceptualize influences on their child’s develop-
ment and behavior, hoiv they handle issues of discipline and
authority, and how they learned to parent. Parental reasoning,
as elicited in an hour-long semistructured interview, was rated
on a four-point scale that measures the degree to which moth-
ers are able to view their children in an empathic fashion. A
level one score on the Parental Awareness Measure indicates
that the mother shows little capacity for empathy, understand-
ing the child through projection of her own experience and
organizing the parental role around maternal wants and needs
only. In contrast, a level four score on this measure indicates
that the parent is aware of the psychological complexity of the
child’s personality and of the developmental changes that trans-
form the child, the parent, and their relationship. Level four
responses also indicate that the parent strives to balance her
own needs with the needs of the child, so that both can be
satisfactorily met. T h e Parental Awareness Measure has been
shown to discriminate between parents with histories of child
*The Hollingshead and Redlich measure, a standard tool for assessing
socioeconomic status, focuses primarily on occupational status rather than on
income. As will be discussed in this paper, the two groups of mothers did
report differences in disposable family income at various points in their
daughters’ lives.
Fin dings
Our extensive interviews invited the mothers to give personal
accounts of how they experienced the job of parenting, and
how raising a child fit into their own development. We were
impressed by the openness of our subjects, and by their willing-
ness to probe into painful memories as well as to consider hypo-
thetical scenarios. Nonetheless, in contrast to the mothers of
normal adolescents, the mothers of borderline adolescents were
significantly more likely to conceive of their daughters in a
grossly egocentric fashion, and in general portrayed family life
as a series of emergencies and feats of survival.
Maternal Egocentrism
Mothers of borderline adolescents offered a significantly
greater percentage of level one (egocentric) responses on the
Parental Awareness Measure than did mothers of normal ado-
lescents (t[24] = 2.40, p = .01, one-tailed test).3 Thus, on the
average, 31% of the responses of mothers of borderlines were
level one responses, whereas only 17% of the responses of
mothers of normal adolescents were coded as level one. Al-
though, on the average, mothers of borderlines offered almost
twice as many level one responses as mothers of normal adoles-
cents during the course of the administration of the Parental
Awareness Measure, they also offered some higher-level, more
empathic responses. Thus, if one averages all the scores offered
by the mothers, the two groups of mothers cannot be differenti-
ated statistically.
Overall, these findings support the psychodynamic hypoth-
esis of the etiology of BPD. We found that mothers of border-
lines showed a greater tendency to understand their daughters
3Percentageof level one scores was computed by dividing the number of
level one scores of each protocol by the total number of scorable responses
of that protocol.
doors. I tried locking her in her room. Ahh, and that just
brought it to physical abuse.
As indicated by her responses, Mrs. Mead has little ability
to evaluate and then respond to her daughter’s needs. Indeed,
Mrs. Mead’s understanding of her relationship with her daugh-
ter is extremely egocentric: because she feels exploited, she
assumes her daughter is “reaping . . . all the riches” and ignores
the evidence of her daughter’s serious personality difficulties.
Mrs. Mead is unhappy with her relationship with her daughter,
but rather than assume some share of responsibility for her
difficulty parenting this child, she places all the blame on her
daughter’s shoulders. Indeed, she describes herself as the inno-
cent victim of her powerful daughter who maliciously misbe-
haves and causes Mrs. Mead to suffer from low self-esteem.
When asked why her own self-esteem is so low, she focuses
on her daughter’s transgressions and does not consider other
factors-including personal vulnerabilities and life experiences
unrelated to her daughter-that contributed to her distress.
leave the house or let her children leave the house. This mother
struggled as the primary financial provider and single parent
of five children for five years. During this time, her oldest son’s
drug addiction became a source of great family conflict. Mrs.
Kane is currently married to her third husband.
Care 4. Mrs. Pringle and Katie. Like Diane, Katie was raised
in a chaotic and abusive environment. Her biological father
divorced her mother when the child was three. The following
year, Mrs. Pringle remarried a man who adopted Katie. Follow-
ing her adoption, Katie lost all contact with her biological fa-
ther. Mrs. Pringle met her second husband at church. Katie’s
adoptive father was apparently addicted to alcohol, marijuana,
and cocaine. He frequently physically abused her mother, and
sexually abused Katie. After twelve conflict-ridden years, the
marriage dissolved, apparently after Katie’s adoptive father be-
gan an adulterous relationship. Mrs. Pringle reported that the
second divorce traumatized the entire family and may have
contributed to Katie’s acute suicidality and hospitalization. Fol-
lowing the divorce, Katie resumed contact with her biological
father. Katie no longer visits with her adoptive father.
Discussion
Given the limitations of the data, as detailed below, this study
can only be seen as a pilot project that is exploratory in intent.
Thus the results of the comparisons between the two groups
will have to be interpreted with caution. Nonetheless, we con-
sider this preliminary study to be of interest since it represents
one of the only research efforts to directly examine the widely
held psychoanalytic hypothesis that borderline pathology re-
flects disturbances in the mother-child relationship. The results
of this study suggest that psychoanalytic theories of the etiology
of BPD are correct insofar as the mothers of borderlines in our
sample tended to conceive of their children in an egocentric
and unempathic fashion.
REFERENCES
Department of Psjchology
hiarlboro Psyhiatric Hospital
526 Courtly Road, Route 520
hfarlboro, NJ 07746-1099