Name of the Domain
Psychopathology
Rationale
The sources that have been chosen were selected based on their validity and reliability. Hence, they have been peer-reviewed, published within the last five years, and illustrate factual data. Moreover, they all highlight the topic of childhood psychopathology in relation to its causes. Berg et al. (2019), Franz and McKinney (2018), Monk et al. (2019), and Hua et al. (2019) link parents to the development of psychopathology in children. Thus, research points out that children who experience a parental death, live with a parent with a psychiatric condition, and have been born after the mother experienced prenatal distress are more likely to develop mental health issues early on. Huber et al. (2018) link such outcomes to a lack of socialization during the early years. Moreover, Zarse et al. (2019) point out neglect and abuse as catalysts for psychopathology. The sources can be incorporated as a group in research on children with psychological conditions in correlation with potential causes or facilitators.
References
Berg, L., Rostila, M., Arat, A., & Hjern, A. (2019). Parental death during childhood and violent crime in late adolescence to early adulthood: A Swedish national cohort study.Palgrave Communications, 5(1). Web.
Franz, A. O., & McKinney, C. (2018). Parental and child psychopathology: Moderated mediation by gender and parent–child relationship quality.Child Psychiatry & Human Development, 49(6), 843–852. Web.
Hua, P., Bugeja, L., & Maple, M. (2019). A systematic review on the relationship between childhood exposure to external cause parental death, including suicide, on subsequent suicidal behaviour.Journal of Affective Disorders, 257, 723–734. Web.
Huber, L., Plötner, M., & Schmitz, J. (2018). Social Competence and psychopathology in early childhood: A systematic review.European Child & Adolescent Psychiatry, 28(4), 443–459. Web.
Monk, C., Lugo-Candelas, C., & Trumpff, C. (2019). Prenatal developmental origins of future psychopathology: Mechanisms and pathways.Annual Review of Clinical Psychology, 15(1), 317–344. Web.
Zarse, E. M., Neff, M. R., Yoder, R., Hulvershorn, L., Chambers, J. E., & Chambers, R. A. (2019). The adverse childhood experiences questionnaire: Two decades of research on childhood trauma as a primary cause of adult mental illness, addiction, and medical diseases.Cogent Medicine, 6(1), 1581447. Web.