Nonacceptance of emotional responses mediated the relation between maternal attachment security and
internalizing symptom change.
Not exact matches
Changes in severity of children's internalizing and externalizing symptoms over the 3 - month period were also examined using changes in CBCL
Changes in severity of children's
internalizing and externalizing
symptoms over the 3 - month period were also examined using
changes in CBCL
changes in CBCL scores.
Changes in child
symptoms included reductions in
internalizing, externalizing, posttraumatic stress, depression, anxiety, anger and dissociative
symptoms from pretreatment to posttreatment gains.
Results for both groups showed positive
changes in protective factors (parenting attitudes, parenting competence, and social support); diminished risk factors (depressive
symptoms, parenting stress, life stress); improved safety (physical and psychological care of children); and improved behavior (decreased
internalizing and externalizing).
We used latent growth curve modeling to characterize trajectories of youth
internalizing and externalizing
symptom change across the 3 waves.
Conversely, severity predicted greater Reliable
Change in parent reported
internalizing and externalizing
symptoms, and child reported depressive
symptoms.
To test when the protective effect of
internalizing symptoms became similar for youth high and low on externalizing
symptoms, we re-estimated six additional growth models
changing the specification of the intercept to W1, W2, and W4 - W7.
In the predictions of Reliable
Change of parent - reported
internalizing and externalizing child
symptoms, non-anxiety comorbidity could be classified as a classical suppressor variable.
Second, we examined whether the congruence or incongruence of maternal depressive
symptoms between pregnancy and early postnatal period, represented by the
change of levels of maternal depressive
symptoms between pregnancy and postnatal period, influences frontal EEG activity and functional connectivity, as well as
internalizing and externalizing behaviors at 24 months of age.
Reactivity measures of the hypothalamic pituitary - adrenal (HPA) axis and autonomic nervous system (ANS) biomarkers (heart rate, HR; respiratory sinus arrhythmia, RSA; and pre-ejection period, PEP) to a social stress task were used to predict concurrent and longitudinal
changes in
internalizing and externalizing
symptoms.
Attachment plays an important role in
symptom change for
internalizing problems, with nonacceptance of emotional responses partially mediating this link.
Early paternal depressive
symptoms predicted many aspects of children's outcome 3 years later, including externalizing and
internalizing problems, social skills deficits, and lower cognitive and academic functioning, and predicted
changes in children's externalizing,
internalizing, and social problems across the preschool years.