Sentences with phrase «child emotional insecurity»

Child Emotional Insecurity and Academic Achievement: The Role of Sleep Disruptions Pages 29 — 38 El - Sheikh, Mona; Buckhalt, Joseph A.; Keller, Peggy S.; Cummings, E. Mark; Acebo, Christine

Not exact matches

In the midst of the chaos and insecurity is the crowning tragedy of what is happening in the emotional life of the children.
Children who are living with food insecurity during the first five years of their lives are more likely to lag behind in social, emotional, and cognitive development once they start kindergarten.
For many children (not all) these relationships contribute to their feelings of insecurity, lack of attachment, and emotional distress.
interparental conflict, emotional insecurity, and child psychological adjustment across multiple
Children reported on their emotional insecurity in the interparental relationship in
Results indicated that emotional insecurity was a particularly powerful mediator of prospective associations between interparental conflict (i.e., dysphoria and hostility) and child adjustment during adolescence rather than childhood.
«In a classic enmeshed relationship, parents allow their own troubles and insecurities to promote a role - reversal relationship where the child is used to meet the parent's emotional needs for support, nurturance, comforting and sense of self - worth.
Transactional Cascades of Destructive Interparental Conflict, Children's Emotional Insecurity,
Chronic, unresolved conflict is associated with greater emotional insecurity in children.
Marital, psychological, and physical aggression and children's mental and physical health: Emotional insecurity as mediators of effects
(Alternating custody, e.g. week - on / week - off, was associated with disorganized attachment in 60 percent of infants under 18 months; older children and adults who had endured this arrangement as youngsters exhibited what the researcher described as «alarming levels of emotional insecurity and poor ability to regulate strong emotion.»)
If you are divorced and continue to fight with your ex, you are putting your child at greater risk for emotional insecurity, according to the American Psychological Association.
Even when study is limited to family processes as influences, multivariate risk models find support.9 - 12 For example, Cummings and Davies13 presented a framework for how multiple disruptions in child and family functioning and related contexts are supported as pertinent to associations between maternal depression and early child adjustment, including problematic parenting, marital conflict, children's exposure to parental depression, and related difficulties in family processes.10, 11 A particular focus of this family process model is identifying and distinguishing specific response processes in the child (e.g., emotional insecurity; specific emotional, cognitive, behavioral or physiological responses) that, over time, account for normal development or the development of psychopathology.10
One possibility is that children high in emotional insecurity may adopt their
program to examine the mediational role of children's emotional insecurity in the prospective
These include: • Trust issues • Infidelity • Hurt feelings • Triggering old wounds • Power struggles • Differences in upbringing • Conflict over child rearing • Communication problems • Blaming each other • Nitpicking • Insecurity and neediness • Competition between partners • Keeping secrets • Financial difficulties • Trouble with in - laws, friends and family • Keeping romance alive • Sexual dysfunction • Neglect and disconnection • Emotional or physical abuse • Feeling disrespected or taken for granted
«In the throes of their own insecurity, troubled parents may rely on the child to meet the parent's emotional needs, turning to the child to provide the parent with support, nurturance, or comforting (Zeanah & Klitzke, 1991).»
Alternating custody, e.g. week - on / week - off, was associated with disorganized attachment in 60 percent of infants under 18 months; older children and adults who had endured this arrangement as youngsters exhibited what the researcher described as «alarming levels of emotional insecurity and poor ability to regulate strong emotion.»
Certainly not all children who go into day care will end up with weak parental bonds, aggressive tendencies, academic problems, personal insecurities, difficulties in peer relations, or other evidence of emotional or cognitive damage.
Controlling for differences in maternal sensitivity, a family climate with high levels of emotional stress was associated with the child's insecurity.
Absent exposure to the kinds of adversities that substantially increase emotional insecurity, most LBW / PT children seem unlikely to manifest significant behavioral maladjustment.
In addition, mothers» attachment insecurities to their own and their children's psychological functioning (both anxiety and avoidance) at the time of diagnosis were associated with their children's emotional problems and children's poor self - image 7 years later.
Consistent with child effects models, adolescent emotional insecurity predicted fathers» destructive conflict behaviors.
Second, although children's capacities for self - regulation continue to develop, during middle childhood they still have limited capacity to cope with the emotional insecurity engendered by exposure to family conflict and to refrain from modeling the negative behaviors they observe in adult household members.
They may instead behave in ways that escalate or provoke the child's emotional insecurity and dysregulation.
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