International Comparisons of Behavioral and Emotional Problems in Preschool Children: Parents' Reports from 24 Societies

Tarih
2011Yazar
Rescorla, Leslie A.
Achenbach, Thomas M.
Ivanova, Masha Y.
Harder, Valerie S.
Otten, Laura
Bilenberg, Niels
Bjarnadottir, Gudrun
Capron, Christiane
De Pauw, Sarah S. W.
Dias, Pedro
Dobrean, Anca
Doepfner, Manfred
Duyme, Michel
Eapen, Valsamma
Erol, Nese
Esmaeili, Elaheh Mohammad
Ezpeleta, Lourdes
Frigerio, Alessandra
Fung, Daniel S. S.
Goncalves, Miguel
Guomundsson, Halldor
Jeng, Suh-Fang
Jusiene, Roma
Kim, Young Ah
Kristensen, Solvejg
Liu, Jianghong
Lecannelier, Felipe
Leung, Patrick W. L.
Machado, Barbara Cesar
Montirosso, Rosario
Oh, Kyung Ja
Ooi, Yoon Phaik
Plueck, Julia
Pomalima, Rolando
Pranvera, Jetishi
Schmeck, Klaus
Shahini, Mimoza
Silva, Jaime R.
Simsek, Zeynep
Sourander, Andre
Valverde, Jose
van der Ende, Jan
Van Leeuwen, Karla G.
Wu, Yen-Tzu
Yurdusen, Sema
Zubrick, Stephen R.
Verhulst, Frank C.
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International comparisons were conducted of preschool children's behavioral and emotional problems as reported on the Child Behavior Checklist for Ages 11/2-5 by parents in 24 societies (N=19,850). Item ratings were aggregated into scores on syndromes; Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders-oriented scales; a Stress Problems scale; and Internalizing, Externalizing, and Total Problems scales. Effect sizes for scale score differences among the 24 societies ranged from small to medium (3-12%). Although societies differed greatly in language, culture, and other characteristics, Total Problems scores for 18 of the 24 societies were within 7.1 points of the omnicultural mean of 33.3 (on a scale of 0-198). Gender and age differences, as well as gender and age interactions with society, were all very small (effect sizes1%). Across all pairs of societies, correlations between mean item ratings averaged .78, and correlations between internal consistency alphas for the scales averaged .92, indicating that the rank orders of mean item ratings and internal consistencies of scales were very similar across diverse societies.