M. Wells et R. Jones, RELATIONSHIP AMONG CHILDHOOD PARENTIFICATION, SPLITTING, AND DISSOCIATION - PRELIMINARY FINDINGS, The American journal of family therapy, 26(4), 1998, pp. 331-339
On the basis of self-reports from 124 undergraduate students, empirica
l support was found for the hypothesis that childhood parentification
(i.e., the reversal of child and parent roles) is significantly relate
d to defensive splitting ton the Gerson Splitting Scale [M. J. Gerson,
1984] in adulthood even when the effects of dissociation (measured by
Dissociative Experiences Scale [E. M. Bernstein & F. W. Putnam, 1986]
are already accounted for. In contrast, childhood parentification was
not found to be significantly related to the use of cognitive dissoci
ation when the effects of splitting were accounted for. This finding i
s particularly important because splitting and dissociation are often
related and sometimes confused with one another in the psychology lite
rature. The authors relate these results to earlier findings that pare
ntification is associated with both masochistic and narcissistic perso
nality styles in adults and that individuals who have been parentified
have diminished capacities for object relations under conditions of s
eparation and disappointment in others.