Regression analyses on the FIFO partners sample indicated that child and family functioning were best predicted by family factors, including harsh parenting and
parental emotional adjustment.
Not exact matches
The parent, peer, teacher and school subscales correlate with measures of social
adjustment and
emotional functioning in the expected direction (e.g positive correlations between
parental attachment and
emotional adjustment).
Parental attachment and adolescents»
emotional adjustment: The association with social skills and relational competence.
Furthermore, low income is strongly associated with poor
parental mental and physical health.40, 42 Parental irritability and depressive symptoms have been associated with fewer interactions and more conflictual interactions with older children, leading to less satisfactory emotional, social, and cognitive development.43 Specifically, the parents» emotional state and parenting has been shown to greatly affect their children's social adjustment, self - esteem, social competence, and externalizing as well as internalizing behaviors.10, 13 As noted by the Institute of Medicine, there is an intergenerational transmission of depressive symptoms.17 Whether this relationship is due to poverty, home environment, family structure, family resources, social support, or other factors warrants further r
parental mental and physical health.40, 42
Parental irritability and depressive symptoms have been associated with fewer interactions and more conflictual interactions with older children, leading to less satisfactory emotional, social, and cognitive development.43 Specifically, the parents» emotional state and parenting has been shown to greatly affect their children's social adjustment, self - esteem, social competence, and externalizing as well as internalizing behaviors.10, 13 As noted by the Institute of Medicine, there is an intergenerational transmission of depressive symptoms.17 Whether this relationship is due to poverty, home environment, family structure, family resources, social support, or other factors warrants further r
Parental irritability and depressive symptoms have been associated with fewer interactions and more conflictual interactions with older children, leading to less satisfactory
emotional, social, and cognitive development.43 Specifically, the parents»
emotional state and parenting has been shown to greatly affect their children's social
adjustment, self - esteem, social competence, and externalizing as well as internalizing behaviors.10, 13 As noted by the Institute of Medicine, there is an intergenerational transmission of depressive symptoms.17 Whether this relationship is due to poverty, home environment, family structure, family resources, social support, or other factors warrants further research.
On the basis of the
emotional contagion hypothesis, we thought that effective
parental coping among the COPE mothers would lead to better
adjustment outcomes for their children.
Addressing this gap, the present study examined multiple factors longitudinally that link
parental depressive symptoms to adolescent
adjustment problems, building on a conceptual model informed by
emotional security theory (EST).
Courts consider several factors in deciding child custody, including the child's wishes and concerns, the child's relationship with their parents, siblings, and extended family, the child's
adjustment and development at home, school, and in the community, the mental, physical, and
emotional health of the parents, child, and siblings, the wishes and concerns of the parents,
parental abuse or neglect and
parental failure to pay support.
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
Parental desire to eliminate the need for their child or children to deal with the additional hassles and habit changes required by weekly residence changes, particularly during the emotional adjustment of a new parental sep
Parental desire to eliminate the need for their child or children to deal with the additional hassles and habit changes required by weekly residence changes, particularly during the
emotional adjustment of a new
parental sep
parental separation.
Recent UK research on young children attempts to plug some of these research gaps, and supports the idea that more frequent father involvement and fathers» more positive attitudes towards their
parental role benefit young children's socio -
emotional adjustment (Flouri et al., 2016; Kroll et al., 2016; McMunn et al., 2015; Opondo, Redshaw, Savage - McGlynn & Quigley, 2016).
Children's behavioural and
emotional problems may also be exacerbated by negative
parental feelings such as hostility (Brannigan, Gemmell et al. 2002); and both poor
adjustment and low school achievement have been linked to parents» own perceived lack of competence (Coleman and Karraker 2003; Jones and Prinz 2005).
Generally, authors agree that decreases in
parental control over both adolescent behavioral and
emotional functioning domains are necessary to promote healthy adolescent
adjustment (Baumrind, 1991c), as is consistency of high levels of warmth and acceptance (Hauser et al., 1984; Holmbeck, Paikoff et al., 1995; Powers, Hauser, Schwartz, Noam & Jacobson, 1983).
Dimensions of martial conflict, children's
emotional security regarding interparental conflict, and parenting style were examined as mediators between
parental dysphoria and child
adjustment.
Lundahl et al. found that parenting programmes reduced the risk of
parental child abuse measured by parents» attitudes towards abuse,
emotional adjustment, child - rearing skills and actual abuse (Lundahl et al., 2006a).
Children's
emotional security in the context of particular marital conflict styles also mediated relations between
parental dysphoria and child
adjustment problems, with similar pathways found for mothers and fathers.