Structure provided by parents in
middle childhood predicts cortisol reactivity in adolescence among the offspring of parents with bipolar disorder and controls
Is the development of multiple mental health problems in girls during
middle childhood predicted by multiple mental health problems of the mother?
Not exact matches
ABSTRACT: In the present study we examined 1) whether
childhood disruptive behaviour, in terms of aggressiveness, hyper - activity and social adjustment,
predicts school performance since toddler age or whether becomes it relevant first since
middle or late
childhood, 2) whether gender differences within the associations between school perform - ance and disruptive behaviour exist, and 3) whether there are trait specific effects in these associations, i.e. whether hyperactivity is more relevant determinant for later school success than aggression and social adjust - ment.
The second interesting finding was that initial rejecting behaviors
predicted significantly lower Social Relation score in
middle childhood (6 - 8 years old).
Moderation hypotheses were tested by investigating whether the statistical interaction of maladaptive parenting or abuse during
childhood or early adolescence and interpersonal difficulties during
middle adolescence
predicted suicide attempts during late adolescence or early adulthood.
Maternal sensitivity, infant attachment, and temperament in early
childhood predict adjustment in
middle childhood: The case of adopted children and their biologically unrelated parents.
Decline in the Quality of Family Relationships
Predicts Escalation in Children's Internalizing Symptoms from
Middle to Late
Childhood.
The next question concerned whether mothers» multiple mental health problems
predicted daughters» multiple mental health problems during
middle childhood even when maternal childrearing practices were taken into account.
A second point that requires consideration is that all of the variables that
predict anxiety in
middle childhood include maternal report to some extent.
One study recently reported that poverty longitudinally
predicted increased externalising behaviour problems, including hyperactivity, across early to
middle childhood, supporting our findings [11].
In the current pilot study (N = 45 youth), we investigate whether psychobiological divergence of neuroendocrine and self - reported reactivity in
middle childhood prospectively
predicts health risk behaviors (HRBs) in adolescence.