Effects of individual differences, society, and culture on youth-rated problems and strengths in 38 societies.

Journal: Journal Of Child Psychology And Psychiatry, And Allied Disciplines
Published:
Abstract

Background: Clinicians increasingly serve youths from societal/cultural backgrounds different from their own. This raises questions about how to interpret what such youths report. Rescorla et al. (2019, European Child & Adolescent Psychiatry, 28, 1107) found that much more variance in 72,493 parents' ratings of their offspring's mental health problems was accounted for by individual differences than by societal or cultural differences. Although parents' reports are essential for clinical assessment of their offspring, they reflect parents' perceptions of the offspring. Consequently, clinical assessment also requires self-reports from the offspring themselves. To test effects of individual differences, society, and culture on youths' self-ratings of their problems and strengths, we analyzed Youth Self-Report (YSR) scores for 39,849 11-17 year olds in 38 societies.

Methods: Indigenous researchers obtained YSR self-ratings from population samples of youths in 38 societies representing 10 culture cluster identified in the Global Leadership and Organizational Behavioral Effectiveness study. Hierarchical linear modeling of scores on 17 problem scales and one strengths scale estimated the percent of variance accounted for by individual differences (including measurement error), society, and culture cluster. ANOVAs tested age and gender effects.

Results: Averaged across the 17 problem scales, individual differences accounted for 92.5% of variance, societal differences 6.0%, and cultural differences 1.5%. For strengths, individual differences accounted for 83.4% of variance, societal differences 10.1%, and cultural differences 6.5%. Age and gender had very small effects.

Conclusions: Like parents' ratings, youths' self-ratings of problems were affected much more by individual differences than societal/cultural differences. Most variance in self-rated strengths also reflected individual differences, but societal/cultural effects were larger than for problems, suggesting greater influence of social desirability. The clinical significance of individual differences in youths' self-reports should thus not be minimized by societal/cultural differences, which-while important-can be taken into account with appropriate norms, as can gender and age differences.

Authors
Masha Ivanova, Thomas Achenbach, Lori Turner, Fredrik Almqvist, Ivan Begovac, Niels Bilenberg, Hector Bird, Anders Broberg, Mery Córdova Calderón, Myriam Chahed, Hoang-minh Dang, Anca Dobrean, Mandred Döpfner, Nese Erol, Maria Forns, Halldór Guðmundsson, Helga Hannesdóttir, Nohelia Hewitt Ramirez, Yasuko Kanbayashi, Suyen Karki, Hans Koot, Michael Lambert, Patrick Leung, Dorcas Magai, Alfio Maggiolini, Christa Metzke, Asghar Minaei, Marina Monzani Da Rocha, Paulo A Moreira, Mesfin Mulatu, Torunn Nøvik, Kyung Oh, Djaouida Petot, Jean-michel Petot, Cecilia Pisa, Rolando Pomalima, Alexandra Roussos, Vlasta Rudan, Michael Sawyer, Mimoza Shahini, Zeynep Simsek, Hans-christoph Steinhausen, Frank Verhulst, Sheila Weintraub, Bahr Weiss, Tomasz Wolanczyk, Eugene Zhang, Nelly Zilber, Rita Žukauskienė