journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/31576196/accelerating-the-pace-of-science-improving-parenting-practices-in-parents-with-opioid-use-disorder
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Camille C Cioffi, Leslie D Leve, John R Seeley
A public health emergency exists in the United States as a result of rising overdose deaths related to Opioid Use Disorder (OUD). With the rise of OUD has also come an increase in the number of children exposed to parents who suffer from an OUD. There is a pressing need for parenting interventions for individuals with OUD to provide safe environments for the children being reared in the face of this epidemic. Research on parenting with an OUD is sparse, but it is impractical to move linearly from basic research to program development and implementation given the urgent need for intervention - a trajectory that prior research has established takes approximately 17 years...
2019: Parenting, Science and Practice
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38130402/parent-spanking-and-verbal-punishment-and-young-child-internalizing-and-externalizing-behaviors-in-latino-immigrant-families-test-of-moderation-by-context-and-culture
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
R Gabriela Barajas-Gonzalez, Esther Calzada, Keng-Yen Huang, Maite Covas, Claudia M Castillo, Laurie Brotman
OBJECTIVE: This study examined the prevalence and correlates of spanking and verbal punishment in a community sample of Latino immigrant families with young children, as well as the association of spanking and verbal punishment with child internalizing and externalizing problems 1 year later. Parenting context (e.g., warmth) and cultural context (e.g., the cultural value of respeto) are considered as potential moderators. DESIGN: Parenting and cultural socialization practices were assessed via parent self-report in sample of 633 Mexican and Dominican immigrant families with young children ( M age = 4...
2018: Parenting, Science and Practice
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33343236/parental-depressive-symptoms-and-parenting-associations-with-children-s-coping-in-families-of-depressed-parents
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Lauren M Henry, Rex Forehand, Kelly H Watson, Meredith Gruhn, Alexandra H Bettis, Laura G McKee, Bruce E Compas
Objective: This multi-method study examined parental depressive symptoms and levels of harsh/intrusive and warm/responsive parenting as correlates of secondary control coping (acceptance, cognitive reappraisal, distraction) in children of parents with a history of depression. Design: The sample included 165 parents with a history of major depressive disorder and their 9- to15-year-old children. Parents provided self-reports of their current depressive symptoms; videorecordings of parent-child interactions were coded to determine parenting behaviors; and children reported their use of secondary control coping strategies...
2018: Parenting, Science and Practice
https://read.qxmd.com/read/31244557/maternal-coparenting-attitudes-and-toddler-adjustment-moderated-mediation-through-father-s-positive-engagement
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jia Yan, Sarah J Schoppe-Sullivan, Claire M Kamp Dush
Objective: To better understand the antecedents of fathers' positive engagement and child externalizing behaviors, we examined the roles of maternal coparenting attitudes and fathers' prenatal intuitive parenting behaviors in predicting fathers' positive engagement and toddler externalizing behaviors. Design: One hundred and eighty-two dual-earner families residing in Columbus, Ohio were recruited when parents were expecting their first child. They were followed across the transition to parenthood and assessed at the third trimester (Time 1), 3 months postpartum (Time 2), 9 months postpartum (Time 3), and when the child reached approximately 27 months of age (Time 4)...
2018: Parenting, Science and Practice
https://read.qxmd.com/read/30881229/father-involvement-and-father-child-relationship-quality-an-intergenerational-perspective
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Von Jessee, Kari Adamsons
Objective: The present study looks at predictors that may be associated with father-child relationship quality and whether relationship quality appears to be transmitted across generations. Design: This study includes 2,970 U.S. families who participated in the Fragile Families and Child Well-Being Study. Structural equation modeling was used to assess associations between fathers' relationship with paternal grandfathers (PGF) during their own childhood and when their own children are 1 year old, father involvement at age 1, and child reports of father-child relationship quality at age 9...
2018: Parenting, Science and Practice
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34262406/mother-and-child-ratings-of-child-anxiety-associations-with-behavioral-avoidance-and-the-role-of-family-accommodation
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Eli R Lebowitz
Objective: This study compared mother and child ratings of child anxiety to each other and to an objective measure of the child's avoidant behavior, using a novel motion-tracking paradigm. The study also examined the moderating role of family accommodation for the link between mother ratings of child anxiety and child behavioral avoidance. Design: Participants were 98 children (7- to 14-years-old) and their mothers. Children met criteria for a primary anxiety disorder...
2017: Parenting, Science and Practice
https://read.qxmd.com/read/31530998/parents-perceptions-of-and-responses-to-children-s-emotions-relations-with-meta-emotion-philosophy-and-adult-attachment
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jennifer N Morey, Amy L Gentzler
Objective: This study investigated how parents' perceptions of, feelings toward, and anticipated responses to children's emotions relate to parents' meta-emotion philosophy (MEP) and attachment. Design: Parents (112 mothers and 95 fathers) completed an online research study where they viewed photographs of unfamiliar girls and boys (aged 10 to 14 years) displaying varying intensities of happiness, sadness, fear, anger, and neutral expressions. Parents labeled the emotion, identified the emotion's intensity, and reported their mirrored emotion and responses...
2017: Parenting, Science and Practice
https://read.qxmd.com/read/31223294/custom-fit-parenting-how-low-and-well-accepted-young-adolescents-benefit-from-peer-related-parenting
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Kelly M Tu, Kim D Gregson, Stephen A Erath, Gregory S Pettit
Objective: The present study investigated whether longitudinal associations between peer-related parenting behaviors (facilitation of peer interactions, social coaching about peer problems) and peer adjustment were moderated by young adolescents' peer status. Design: Participants included 123 young adolescents ( M age = 12.03 years; 50% boys; 58.5% European American) at Time 1. At Time1 (summer before the middle school transition), parents reported on their facilitation of peer interaction opportunities and coaching strategies to a hypothetical peer exclusion situation; teachers reported on youth peer acceptance...
2017: Parenting, Science and Practice
https://read.qxmd.com/read/29308056/parenting-stress-and-youth-symptoms-among-girls-with-and-without-adhd
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Chanelle T Gordon, Stephen P Hinshaw
Objective: To examine the aspects of parenting stress-parental distress [PD] and parental stress due to dysfunctional interactions [PSDI]-reported by mothers of girls with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) in both childhood and adolescence and to understand their associations with internalizing and externalizing symptoms in adolescence. Design: The diverse sample comprised 120 girls with ADHD and 81 age- and ethnicity-matched comparison girls, evaluated at ages 6-12 years and followed prospectively for 5 years...
2017: Parenting, Science and Practice
https://read.qxmd.com/read/29276449/extending-models-of-sensitive-parenting-of-infants-to-women-at-risk-for-perinatal-depression
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sherryl H Goodman, Roger Bakeman, Meaghan McCallum, Matthew H Rouse, Stephanie F Thompson
Objective: Recognizing that not all mothers at risk for depression engage in insensitive parenting, this study examined predictors of individual differences in sensitive parenting of infants by mothers with histories of depression, who are at elevated risk for depression during the perinatal period. Design: We examined maternal personal characteristics, context, and early infant temperament as predictors of sensitive parenting. Seventy-six women with a history of major depression were followed through pregnancy and postpartum and observed during play and feeding interactions with their 12-month-old infants...
2017: Parenting, Science and Practice
https://read.qxmd.com/read/27019651/parental-identity-and-its-relation-to-parenting-and-psychological-functioning-in-middle-age
#31
Päivi Fadjukoff, Lea Pulkkinen, Anna-Liisa Lyyra, Katja Kokko
Objective. This article focuses on identity as a parent in relation to parenting and psychological functioning in middle age. Design. Drawn from the Jyväskylä Longitudinal Study of Personality and Social Development, 162 participants (53% females) with children (age 36), represented the Finnish age-cohort born in 1959. Parental identity was assessed at ages 36, 42, and 50. Results. In both women and men, parental identity achievement increased from age 36 to 42 and remained stable to 50. The level of parental identity achievement was higher in women than in men...
April 2, 2016: Parenting, Science and Practice
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35291352/maternal-supportive-behavior-cognitive-talk-and-desire-emotion-talk-at-24-months-distinct-factors-and-differential-antecedents
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Allison Jessee, Nancy L McElwain, Cathryn Booth-LaForce
Objective: Mental-state talk is an important aspect of parenting, but it is not clear whether this type of talk is structurally distinct from behavioral support or sensitivity. Although assessment of sensitive, supportive behavior captures a mother's responses to her child's needs, mental-state talk assesses a mother's consideration of (and comments on) her child's inner world. This study examined the structure and antecedents of mental-state talk, behavioral support, and sensitivity...
2016: Parenting, Science and Practice
https://read.qxmd.com/read/28190978/breaking-down-the-coercive-cycle-how-parent-and-child-risk-factors-influence-real-time-variability-in-parental-responses-to-child-misbehavior
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Erika Lunkenheimer, Anna Lichtwarck-Aschoff, Tom Hollenstein, Christine J Kemp, Isabela Granic
OBJECTIVE: Parent-child coercive cycles have been associated with both rigidity and inconsistency in parenting behavior. To explain these mixed findings, we examined real-time variability in maternal responses to children's off-task behavior to determine whether this common trigger of the coercive cycle (responding to child misbehavior) is associated with rigidity or inconsistency in parenting. We also examined the effects of risk factors for coercion (maternal hostility, maternal depressive symptoms, child externalizing problems, and dyadic negativity) on patterns of parenting...
2016: Parenting, Science and Practice
https://read.qxmd.com/read/28082835/mothers-and-fathers-reports-of-their-supportive-responses-to-their-children-s-negative-emotions-over-time
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jackie A Nelson, Nicole B Perry, Marion O'Brien, Susan D Calkins, Susan P Keane, Lilly Shanahan
OBJECTIVE: Parents' emotion socialization practices are thought to be moderately stable over time; however, a partner's socialization practices could initiate change. DESIGN: We examined mothers' and fathers' reports of their supportive responses to their children's negative emotions when the target child was 7 years old and again at age 10. We tested a dyadic, longitudinal path model with 111 mother-father pairs. RESULTS: Significant actor and partner effects emerged...
2016: Parenting, Science and Practice
https://read.qxmd.com/read/27667969/the-role-of-negative-affect-and-physiological-regulation-in-maternal-attribution
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Zhe Wang, Kirby Deater-Deckard, Martha Ann Bell
OBJECTIVE: Mothers who attribute child misbehaviors to children's intentions, and not to situational causes, show more hostile parenting behaviors. Why are some mothers more likely than others to make more hostile attributions (i.e., high intentional attributions and low situational attributions) when confronted with child challenging behaviors? We examined the relation between mothers' perception of child challenging behaviors and their hostile attributions of child misbehaviors, with an emphasis on how maternal negative affect and resting vagal activity moderated this relation...
2016: Parenting, Science and Practice
https://read.qxmd.com/read/27482171/comparing-multi-informant-assessment-measures-of-parental-monitoring-and-their-links-with-adolescent-delinquent-behavior
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Tara M Augenstein, Sarah A Thomas, Katherine B Ehrlich, Samantha Daruwala, Shelby M Reyes, Jeffrey S Chrabaszcz, Andres De Los Reyes
OBJECTIVE: Parents' poor monitoring of adolescents' whereabouts and activities is commonly linked to adolescents' increased engagement in delinquent behaviors. Yet, different domains of parental monitoring (parental monitoring behaviors vs. parental knowledge) and reports from multiple informants (parent vs. adolescent) may vary in their links to delinquent behavior. DESIGN: Seventy-four parental caregivers and 74 adolescents completed survey measures of parental monitoring and knowledge, and adolescents completed self-report surveys of delinquent behavior...
2016: Parenting, Science and Practice
https://read.qxmd.com/read/25745364/paternal-depression-in-the-postnatal-period-and-early-father-infant-interactions
#37
Vaheshta Sethna, Lynne Murray, Elena Netsi, Lamprini Psychogiou, Paul G Ramchandani
Objective. Paternal depressive disorder is associated with adverse effects on child development. One possible mechanism for this is through the effects of the disorder on parenting capacities. The link between paternal depression and father-infant interactions was investigated at three-months postpartum. Design. Major depressive disorder was assessed in N = 192 fathers using a structured clinical interview (SCID). Altogether, 54 fathers met criteria for depression, and 99 fathers were categorized as non-depressed...
January 2, 2015: Parenting, Science and Practice
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34602866/parent-gender-differences-in-emotion-socialization-behaviors-vary-by-ethnicity-and-child-gender
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Geoffrey L Brown, Ashley B Craig, Amy G Halberstadt
Objective: This study examined ethnicity (African American, European American, and Lumbee American Indian) and child gender as moderators of gender differences in parents' emotion socialization behaviors. Design: Mothers and fathers from two samples responded to questionnaires assessing self-expressiveness in the family ( N =196) or reactions to children's negative emotions ( N =299). Results: Differences between mothers and fathers varied as a function of ethnicity...
2015: Parenting, Science and Practice
https://read.qxmd.com/read/27366115/who-are-the-gatekeepers-predictors-of-maternal-gatekeeping
#39
Sarah J Schoppe-Sullivan, Lauren E Altenburger, Meghan A Lee, Daniel J Bower, Claire M Kamp Dush
OBJECTIVE: The goal of this study was to identify determinants of maternal gatekeeping at the transition to parenthood. DESIGN: Participants included 182 different-gender dual-earner couples. During pregnancy, expectant parents completed questionnaires regarding their psychological functioning, attitudes, and expectations, and at 3 months postpartum questionnaires regarding maternal gatekeeping behavior and gate closing attitudes. RESULTS: SEM analyses revealed that mothers were more likely to close the gate to fathers when mothers held greater perfectionistic expectations for fathers' parenting, had poorer psychological functioning, perceived their romantic relationship as less stable, and had higher levels of parenting self-efficacy...
2015: Parenting, Science and Practice
https://read.qxmd.com/read/26877717/ebb-and-flow-in-parent-child-interactions-shifts-from-early-through-middle-childhood
#40
Robert H Bradley, Amy Pennar, Masumi Iida
OBJECTIVE: This study documents the strength of relations between key parent and child behaviors as they occur during typical encounters for both mothers and fathers and determines whether there were shifts in the strength of relations between parent and child behaviors during early and middle childhood. DESIGN: Multivariate multi-level modeling was used to examine associations between three parent behaviors (respect for autonomy, stimulation of development, hostility) and two child behaviors (agency, negativity) as they occurred in typical parent-child activities at four time points from 54 months through 5(th) grade for 817 families...
2015: Parenting, Science and Practice
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