Mov Og Funder 1991 Okru -
While seminal, the 1991 study reflects the limitations of its time.
However, the core thesis remains robust. Current research into "Parental Catastrophizing" regarding pain draws a direct lineage to Movshon and Funder’s work. They established that in chronic illness, the psychological burden on the caregiver is a distinct clinical variable that requires treatment.
Movshon and Funder sought to investigate whether parents of children with JIA exhibited signs of VCS and, crucially, to identify the drivers of this perception. mov og funder 1991 okru
The most profound finding by Movshon and Funder was the discordance between disease activity and parental stress.
The study demonstrated that parents’ ratings of their child’s vulnerability often did not align with rheumatologists' assessments of disease activity. Parents often rated their children as significantly more vulnerable than the medical data warranted. This confirmed that VCS is a psychological construct held by the parent, not a biological reality of the child. While seminal, the 1991 study reflects the limitations
The authors posited two distinct possibilities:
The study highlighted a phenomenon later termed the "somatic fix," where parents focus excessively on physical symptoms as a way to manage general anxiety. Movshon and Funder showed that for these parents, the child’s body became a battlefield of parental anxiety, leading to excessive doctor visits even when the disease was in remission. However, the core thesis remains robust
Abstract This paper provides a deep analytical review of the 1991 study by Movshon and Funder, The Vulnerable Child Syndrome: A Follow-up Study of Children with Juvenile Idiopathic Arthritis. By examining the intersection of chronic pediatric illness and parental perception, Movshon and Funder expanded the etiological understanding of the Vulnerable Child Syndrome (VCS). This review explores how the authors differentiated between organic disease severity and functional disability, illustrating that parental anxiety is often decoupled from medical reality. The implications of this study on modern pediatric psychosocial frameworks are discussed.
