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Sex-related effects on clinicians' attributions of parental responsibility for child psychopathology
Authors:Christine V. Abramowitz  Stephen I. Abramowitz  Lawrence J. Weitz  Bennett Tittler
Affiliation:(1) Sacramento Medical Center of the University of California at Davis School of Medicine, 2315 Stockton Boulevard, 95817 Sacramento, California;(2) George Peabody College for Teachers, USA
Abstract:An attempt was made to reproduce and extend previously reported data suggesting the operation of sex-related bias in clinicians' attributions of parental involvement in children's psychopathologies. More and less sex-role traditional male and female family-oriented practitioners were shown contrived profiles in which a boy or girl was described as masculine or feminine role-deficient, and apportioned maternal versus paternal blame, treatment focus, adjunctive therapy need, and likelihood of sabotage. As in the previous study, mothers were implicated slightly more than fathers and also were viewed as requiring relatively greater therapeutic attention by female than by male clinicians. However, several earlier findings were not replicated. Overall, the results offer only marginal support for the notion of sex-related practitioner bias.
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