1. Neighborhood Influences on Perceived Social Support and Parenting Behaviors.
- Author
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Rhoad-Drogalis A, Dynia JM, Justice LM, Purtell KM, Logan JAR, and Salsberry PJ
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Child, Preschool, Female, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Parenting trends, Parenting psychology, Perception, Residence Characteristics statistics & numerical data, Social Support
- Abstract
Objectives: The aim of our study is to explore the relationships between neighborhood context, perceived social support, and parenting for low-income mothers with young infants., Methods: Data were collected during the first three time points from the Kids in Columbus Study, a 5-year longitudinal study on low-income families. Mother-child dyads (nā=ā228) were recruited from five Women, Infants, and Children Centers located in a Midwestern Metropolitan area. Data for the present study represents mother-child dyads that had completed time point 1 (infant age birth to 3-months), time point 2 (infant age 4 to 7 months), and 3 (infant age 9- to 12-months old)., Results: Social support and neighborhood quality were associated with both maternal perceptions and observed parenting outcomes. Social support positively predicted maternal perceptions of self-efficacy whereas neighborhood quality was positively related to parent involvement., Discussion: Overall, social support and neighborhood quality were related to aspects of parenting in the first year of children's lives. There was no evidence that the association between social support and parenting varied as a function of neighborhood quality. This finding suggests the neighborhood qualities captured in our study do not influence mothers' ability to access social support during infancy.
- Published
- 2020
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