ISSN: 2375-4494

Поведение детей и подростков

Открытый доступ

Наша группа организует более 3000 глобальных конференций Ежегодные мероприятия в США, Европе и США. Азия при поддержке еще 1000 научных обществ и публикует более 700 Открытого доступа Журналы, в которых представлены более 50 000 выдающихся деятелей, авторитетных учёных, входящих в редколлегии.

 

Журналы открытого доступа набирают больше читателей и цитируемости
700 журналов и 15 000 000 читателей Каждый журнал получает более 25 000 читателей

Индексировано в
  • Индекс Коперника
  • Google Scholar
  • Открыть J-ворота
  • Академические ключи
  • БезопасностьЛит
  • РефСик
  • Университет Хамдарда
  • ЭБСКО, Аризона
  • OCLC- WorldCat
  • Публикации
  • Женевский фонд медицинского образования и исследований
  • Евро Паб
  • ICMJE
Поделиться этой страницей

Абстрактный

Association of Family Structure and its Environment with Aggressive Behaviour of Children (6-8years) in a Rural Community

Mahjabeen Khan, Syed Mustafeel Aser Quadri and Sina Aziz

Objectives: To determine the association of family structure and family environment with aggressive behavior of
children (6-8years) in a rural community of Gadap town, Karachi, Pakistan
Subjects and Methods: This is a questionnaire based cross sectional survey to determine the association of
family structure and environment with aggressive behavior of children (6-8years). Aggressive behaviour is defined
as sudden, explosive outbursts of anger and has been reported as a clinical problem in approximately 23% -40% of
children in some communities. The information was collected by interviewing parents regarding their family structure,
family environment and aggressive behavior of children in school and at home. This quantitative assessment was
made on a validated Performa. The data was analyzed on SPSS windows version 16.
Results: Total numbers of respondents were 384. The impact of aggressive behavior in children were anger
32.8%, violence 36.5%, lack of tolerance for minor disputes 32.3%, respectively. The reliability statistics table had
the actual value for Cronbach’s alpha at 89.1%. The association of aggressive behavior in children has been rooted
in the family size in 34.4%, family type 27.6%, family environment 23.7% and intimate partner violence in 30.2%.
Conclusion: One third of school children had aggressive behaviour directly related to family size and family
environment in a rural area. The significant major risk factors were age, family size 34.4%, family type 27.6%, family
environment 23.7% and intimate partner violence in 30.2%.