Abstract

BackgroundHigh Expressed Emotion (HEE) has been identified as a risk factor for the exacerbation and course of mental illness. EE has been investigated as a caregiver's response to an offspring's problem behavior and pathology. The present meta-analysis regards EE from a transgenerational perspective and as one mechanism that might explain the transgenerational transmission of mental disorders.MethodWe identified a total of 13 studies relying on 16 independent samples of parent-child dyads of parents with a mental illness and healthy controls; these were included in our analysis. Results were synthesized into one effect size per sample; meta-regression on additional effects of parental diagnostic category, child mental illness, and child age were also applied.ResultsParents with a mental illness are classified as HEE significantly more often. Effects were established for high criticism, albeit of small size (OR = 1.45), although they become stronger whenever offspring exhibit mental illness themselves (OR = 2.82).ConclusionThe current study highlights the dearth of studies on EE in families in which a parent has a mental illness and its effects on their children. Our findings highlight EE as a potential mechanism for attributing the transgenerational transmission of mental disorders, especially for the EE-variable criticism, indicating dysfunctional parent-child interactions.Systematic Review Registrationhttp://www.crd.york.ac.uk/PROSPERO/display_record.php?ID=CRD42019117609, identifier: CRD42019117609.

Highlights

  • Worldwide, about 12.1–38.5% of children and adolescents are living with a parent who experiences a Mental illness1 [1,2,3,4]

  • Parents with a mental illness are classified as High Expressed Emotion (HEE) significantly more often

  • 1,533 parents could not be assigned to the group of parents with or without a mental illness because only correlational data on the association between Expressed Emotion (EE) and parental mental illness was reported from both parents with and without a mental illness within the same group

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Summary

Introduction

About 12.1–38.5% of children and adolescents are living with a parent who experiences a Mental illness1 [1,2,3,4]. The Transgenerational Transmission of Mental Disorders system was developed and advanced to provide a comprehensive model to explain such transgenerational transmission of disorders in children of parents with a mental illness [9]. Parent-child-interaction is considered to be a core mechanism contributing to the heightened risk of children of parents with a mental illness for developing a serious mental illness [9, 12, 13] (see Figure 1). The present meta-analysis regards EE from a transgenerational perspective and as one mechanism that might explain the transgenerational transmission of mental disorders

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