Child
behaviour problems mediated parental outcomes, with less adaptation reported by parents of children who displayed aggressive behaviour.
Not exact matches
«So what have I seen — anaphylactic reactions, encephalitis - like symptoms,
behaviour changes, immune —
mediated diseases including autoimmune hemolytic anemia, autoimmune thrombocytopenia, immune
mediated meningitis / vasculitis, inflammatory bowel disease and other digestive disorders, lower urinary tract disease in cats, skin tumors, cancer, chronic skin
problems, chronic ear inflammation.
Latent variable modelling designed to take account of non-observed common genetic and environmental factors underlying the continuities in
problem behaviours across generations also suggested that parenting
behaviour played a role in
mediating the intergenerational transmission of conduct
problems.
Furthermore, several prospective studies have found that child
behaviour problems predict later parent stress, and this may
mediate the relationship between child
behaviour problems and family dysfunction [29, 30, 31, 32, 33].
Changes in parenting
behaviour have now been shown in several studies to
mediate the effects of PMT with young children with conduct
problems.15 This is a critical finding that goes to the core of PMT, as improvement in parenting
behaviour is hypothesized to be the central mechanism by which change in child
behaviour occurs.
As the present study used positive youth development as an antecedent variable, the
mediating effect of life satisfaction on
problem behaviour might not be prominent.
Also, the
mediating effects of life satisfaction on
problem behaviour are supported by Western studies in which stressful life events and parenting were treated as exogenous variables (McKnight et al. 2002; Suldo and Huebner 2004).
Furthermore, the high heritability of CU traits and their association with more chronic and serious aggression and antisocial
behaviour problems make them a strong candidate for the driving force behind the familial transmission of aggressive
behaviour that Halperin et al. [38] argue is
mediated, in part, by reduced central serotonin function.
For instance, McKnight et al. (2002) found that life satisfaction partially
mediated the relationship between stressful life events and adolescent
problem behaviour.
To date, those studies that have attempted to address the longitudinal impact of child
behaviour problems on parent outcomes [e.g. 7, 15, 81, 85] suggest that child
behaviour may
mediate the degree of adaptation in mothers raising a child with ASD over time, with mothers of older children reporting greater wellbeing.
Mediated pathways from maternal depression and early parenting to children's executive function and externalizing
behaviour problems.
Using structural equation modelling, we found that the association between financial stress and
problem behaviour in adolescents was
mediated by depressive feelings and parenting.