Table 6.2 Multivariate analysis of factors associated with less frequent children's activities and
a less warm parent - child relationship: summary of main findings
Not exact matches
Parents also like the safe material used; there is
less concern about chemicals harming your baby due to the
warm water.
The
warmer also helps make night feeds easier (something all new
parents need) and the teat and
warmer work together to help reduce air bubbles meaning
less risk of your baby getting colic.
«If
parents use 24 nappies and follow manufacturers» instructions to wash at 60 degrees C [140 degrees Fahrenheit] using an A-rated washing machine, they will have approximately 24 percent
less impact on global
warming than the report says,» said WEN's Ann Link.
Parents Children that have warm relationships with their parents are less likely to become bullies or victims, compared to children that have neglectful or abusive p
Parents Children that have
warm relationships with their
parents are less likely to become bullies or victims, compared to children that have neglectful or abusive p
parents are
less likely to become bullies or victims, compared to children that have neglectful or abusive
parentsparents.
In the long term, those participating children are more likely to be employed and
less likely to be dependent on government assistance.9 The positive effects are larger, and more likely to be sustained, when programs are high quality.10 In addition, the impact is greatest for children from low - income families.11 Differences in children's cognitive abilities by income are evident at only nine months old and significantly widen by the time children are two years old.12 Children living in poverty are more likely to be subject to stressful home environments — which can have lifelong impacts on learning, cognition, and self - regulation — while
parents living in poverty have limited resources to provide for their families and high barriers to accessing affordable, high - quality child care.13 High - quality early learning programs staffed by
warm and responsive adults can help mitigate these effects, offering a safe and predictable learning environment that fosters children's development.14
When
parents are stressed and worried they can have
less energy for
warm, loving relationships with children.
Parenting style Research shows that
parents who have an authoritative approach — firm about limits, but also
warm and accepting of their child's need to be an individual — tend to have teenagers who are
less likely to be influenced by peer pressure to misbehave.
Father's work - family conflict was linked to
less warm, and more irritable and inconsistent
parenting in Australian families with young children (Cooklin et al., 2016), although high levels of work - family conflict were reported most often by fathers working long hours as the sole breadwinner.
Parents in families with higher adversity scores were
less likely to have a
warm relationship with their child, to share joint activities, to have low conflict and avoid smacking and to exercise control over their child's behaviour.
Taylor et al argue that the important facets of positive
parenting are undermined by the presence of certain socioeconomic conditions, in particular that unemployment, low income, and lack of social support is associated with more punitive and coercive discipline, more rejecting,
less warm behaviours, and more aggressive
parenting strategies affecting the behavioural, educational, and social development of children.
Parents from disadvantaged families were
less likely to have a
warm relationship with their child, and to limit TV viewing to under 2 hours daily.
Parents with more authoritarian attitudes were slightly
less likely to read or sing with their child, and had a
less warm relationship with them.
Mothers in high conflict marriages are reported to be
less warm, more rejecting, and use harsher discipline, and fathers withdraw more and engage in more intrusive interactions with their children compared with
parents in low - conflict marriages (Heatherington and Stanley - Hagan, 1999; Krishnakumar and Buehler, 2000).
Research suggests that maternal depression and associated symptoms may reduce the quality of
parent — child interactions, contributing to
less warm,
less available, and
less sensitive
parenting during daily interactions, and thereby reducing support for the development of child social competencies and peer interaction skills.
In the case of marital conflict, even when
parents try to protect their child from directly witnessing acute emotional outbursts, the negative emotions emerging from the conflict eventually tend to surface during
parent — child interactions, with maritally distressed
parents being
less warm and more rejecting of the child when they interact in a triadic setting (Katz and Gottman, 1996).