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Levels of family assessment: I. Family, marital, and parent–child interaction.
149
Citations
40
References
1998
Year
Family AssessmentFamily MedicineFamily SystemsFamily FunctioningFamily ManagementFamily InvolvementFamily RelationshipFamily InteractionFamily LevelFamily PsychologySocial SciencesFamily LifeChild AssessmentMedicineChild DevelopmentFamily DynamicPsychologyFamily Relationships
Families are complicated systems to assess and quantify, requiring that decisions be made regarding where to focus research. The authors examined 3 levels of family interaction: marital, parent-child, and whole family. Instruments included the McMaster Structured Interview of Family Functioning, the Family Assessment Device, the Mealtime Interaction Coding System, the Dyadic Adjustment Scale, and the Parent/Caregiver Involvement Scale. Results suggest that each measure, representing a unique combination of family level, informant, and setting, contained both independent variance and information redundant with other measures characterizing the family. The strengths of using a theoretical base, in this case the McMaster model of family functioning, and a multimeasure approach are discussed.
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