4.5 Article

Discordance between Adolescents and Parents in Functional Somatic Symptom Reports: Sex Differences and Future Symptom Prevalence

期刊

JOURNAL OF YOUTH AND ADOLESCENCE
卷 52, 期 10, 页码 2182-2195

出版社

SPRINGER/PLENUM PUBLISHERS
DOI: 10.1007/s10964-023-01810-w

关键词

Functional somatic symptoms; Sex differences; Gender roles; Adolescence; Parents; Informant discordance

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Functional somatic symptoms are more prevalent in adolescent girls than in boys, and there are differences in the reports of parents and adolescents regarding these symptoms. It is unclear whether parent-adolescent discordance contributes to the higher symptom prevalence in girls. This study investigated the discordance in reported functional somatic symptoms between parents and adolescents throughout adolescence and examined its longitudinal association with symptom prevalence in early adulthood, focusing on sex differences.
Functional somatic symptoms, i.e., physical complaints that cannot be sufficiently explained by an objectifiable biomedical abnormality, become increasingly more prevalent in girls than in boys during adolescence. Both parents and adolescents report more functional somatic symptoms in girls, but their reports correspond only limitedly. It remains unknown whether parent-adolescent discordance contributes to the higher symptom prevalence in girls. This study investigated parent-adolescent discordance in reported functional somatic symptoms throughout adolescence, examined the longitudinal association of parent-adolescent discordance with symptom prevalence in early adulthood and focused on sex differences in these processes. Participants included 2229 adolescents (50.7% female) from four assessments (age 11 to 22 years) of the TRAILS population cohort. Parents and adolescents reported significantly more symptoms in girls than in boys during adolescence. Variance analyses showed that throughout adolescence, parents reported fewer symptoms than girls self-reported and more than boys self-reported. Regression analyses using standardized difference scores showed that lower parent-report than self-report was positively associated with symptom prevalence in early adulthood. Polynomial regression analyses revealed no significant interaction between parent-reported and adolescent self-reported symptoms. Associations did not differ between boys and girls. The findings show that lower parent-reported than self-reported symptoms predict future symptom prevalence in both sexes, but this discordance was more observed in girls. The higher functional somatic symptom prevalence in girls might be partly explained by parental underestimation of symptoms.

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