Family dominant hypothesis for the effect of family of origin on the mental health of offspring: evidence, mechanism, and implications
Zongpei Dai, Yutong Luo, Jieying Tan, Li Hu, Qin Dai

TL;DR
The study proposes a new theory highlighting how the family environment during childhood strongly influences a person's mental health throughout their life.
Contribution
The Family Dominant Hypothesis introduces a new framework emphasizing the central role of family of origin in shaping offspring mental health.
Findings
Family of origin plays a dominant and mediating role in child development and mental health outcomes.
The theory integrates both risk and protective factors from family and environment in influencing mental health.
Potential neurobiological mechanisms and family interventions are suggested to improve mental wellness.
Abstract
Individuals suffering from mental illness often report an abnormal family of origin. Previous family theories have primarily focused solely on family risk factors or treated family members equally and have largely overlooked the critical role of family of origin in offspring development. In this study, we proposed a Family Dominant Hypothesis to emphasize the critical role of family of origin in the lifelong mental health of offspring. The core concept is that family and environmental variables, encompassing both risk and protective factors, contribute to different mental health outcomes in offspring, with the family of origin playing a directly dominant and indirectly mediating role in child development. This theoretical hypothesis highlights the dominant and mediating role of family of origin, considering both risk and protective factors--including biological genetics, family…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMaternal Mental Health During Pregnancy and Postpartum · Family Caregiving in Mental Illness · Family and Disability Support Research
