17,949 results
Search Results
102. Patterns of participation in the Grow parenting program
- Author
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Czymoniewicz-Klippel, Melina, Chesnut, Ryan, DiNallo, Jennifer, and Perkins, Daniel
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- 2019
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103. Kyari: Mothering Autism.
- Author
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Hasan, Sadia
- Abstract
The plan of the paper is to study autism spectrum disorder (ASD) in children as complex conditions that affect cognitive, emotional, social, and physical health. Broadly tracing the medical journey of the condition, it addresses the challenges faced by parents as they make sense of, and navigate their way through the appearance of early symptoms, impediments in correct diagnosis, acceptance, and adapt to live with the condition. The paper attempts to understand autism in medical and neurological terms, as well as the challenges faced by children and parents through the case study of Kyari (meaning a flower bed), a lone centre providing accessible autism care in about 150 km around Moradabad (west UP, India), which has been instrumental in raising an awareness of autism and has a reach that is unprecedented in the city in bringing sensitive autism intervention. It further comprehensively studies the symptoms of ASD, and the role of augmentative and alternative communication, behaviour modification, and the work of organisations like the Centre for Autism, CBSE mandate for inclusive education as applied in the case and Indian government policy for autism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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104. Paternal Incarceration and Parenting Programs in Prison: A Review Paper.
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Purvis, Mayumi
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IMPRISONMENT , *PARENTS , *PARENTING , *CHILDREN , *CRIMINAL justice system , *FATHERS - Abstract
Research resoundingly confirms that the incarceration of a parent has devastating effects on children. Children of inmate parents are considered to be six times more likely to become involved in the adult criminal justice system, compared to other children. Typically, men who are incarcerated have had marginalised upbringing themselves and lacked good parental role models. As such, their ability to parent their own children later in life in a positive way is severely limited. Parenting programs in prison are gaining increasing popularity as a means for addressing this social problem, in the hope of reducing intergenerational offending. This article provides a thorough review of the available literature on paternal incarceration and also sets out the range of factors that contribute to the success of a prison-based parenting program. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
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- 2013
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105. RESEARCH PAPER The parenting competency framework: Learning to be a parent of a child with asthma.
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Maltby, Hendrika J., Kristjanson, Linda, and Coleman, Mardhie E.
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ASTHMA in children , *PARENTS of chronically ill children , *ASTHMA , *PARENTING , *MEDICAL research - Abstract
Every parent who faces an illness in their child might doubt their competence to care. When a chronic illness is diagnosed, competence can be severely challenged because of the sustained and multiple disruptions to daily life. A conceptual framework entitled ‘Learning to be a Parent of a Child with Asthma’ was developed from the results of a descriptive phenomenological study completed in Perth, Western Australia. It describes the stages of challenges to competency that parents experience as they learn to care for their asthmatic children. The impact of this illness on parents and the extent to which they are able to help their children respond to the demands of asthma are critical components in understanding the effect of this disease on parental competency. Insight into parental competency and the relationship to chronic illness will help health professionals provide the support and information needed by parents to manage asthma in their children. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
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106. Infant temperament, pleasure in parenting, and marital happiness in adoptive families<FNR></FNR><FN>Portions of this paper were presented at the 10th Occasional Temperament Conference, Eugene, OR, October 1996. This project is based on research conducted by The Promoting Healthy Development Project (PHDP)—a consortium of researchers dedicated to improving the lives of families and children. Investigators include Rand Conger and Xiaojia Ge (University of California, Davis); Laura V. Scaramella (University of New Orleans); Remi Cadoret and Bruce Pfohl (University of Iowa); David Reiss and Jenae Neiderhiser (George Washington University); and Beverly I. Fagot, Gerald Patterson, and Leslie Leve (Oregon Social Learning Center). Beverly I. Fagot is now deceased. The authors would like to express their sincere appreciation to the PHDP members, without whom this research would not have been possible. We also thank Matthew Rabel for his editorial assistance and all the adoptive families who participated in this project. Support was provided by grants DA 07029, NIDA, U.S. PHS, to Rand Conger; P50 MH46690, NIMH, U.S. PHS, to John B. Reid; and R01 MH 37911, NIMH, U.S. PHS, to Leslie D. Leve. Direct correspondence to: Leslie D. Leve, Oregon Social Learning Center, 160 E. 4th Avenue, Eugene, OR 97401-2426; e-mail: lesliel@oslc.org. </FN>
- Author
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Leve, Leslie Ii, Scaramella, Laura V., and Fagot, Beverly I.
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TEMPERAMENT in children , *NEWBORN infants -- Psychology , *PARENTING , *ADOPTIVE parents , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Temperamental characteristics have been related to later externalizing and internalizing behavioral outcomes. To assess the relationship between temperament and the early family environment, we measured infant temperament, pleasure in parenting, and marital happiness via parent report in 99 families with a nonrelative adoptive infant. Perceptions of child temperament were assessed using two subscales of the Infant Behavior Questionnaire (IBQ; Rothbart, 1981). Mothers and fathers who rated their adoptive child as showing more Distress to Limitations (on the IBQ) reported less pleasure in routine parenting activities; this effect was mediated by marital happiness for fathers. Mothers reported less pleasure in parenting with infants perceived to be more temperamentally fearful (on the IBQ). The bidirectional relationship between temperamental characteristics and pleasure in parenting is discussed. © 2001 Michigan Association for Infant Mental Health. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2001
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107. Keyword Network Analysis of Articles on Resilience of Young children published in South Korea.
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Seenyoung Park and Eonkyung Kim
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PARENTING ,PSYCHOLOGICAL resilience ,SOCIAL interaction ,EXTERNALIZING behavior ,HAPPINESS ,EMOTION regulation ,CITATION indexes ,ORGANIZATIONAL resilience - Abstract
The aim of this study is to investigate the future research direction by utilizing keyword network analysis to analyze topics related to resilience in young children. For this purpose, among the journal papers listed in the Korean Journal Citation Index from 2002 to 2023. The keywords from these papers were extracted, and in-degree and out-degree centrality, betweenness centrality, and networks sociogram were analyzed through keyword network analysis. The findings of this study are as follows: Firstly, in Korean research on resilience of young children, resilience was expressed using eight different terms, and diverse sub-elements were observed accordingly. Secondly, keywords such as selfresilience, which encompasses sub-elements like autonomy, self-control, attachment, concerned behavior, recovery resilience, and resilience, which encompasses sub-elements like resilient competence, relational resilience, and emotional resilience, emerged as important in the analysis. Additionally, crucial keywords associated with young children's resilience included externalizing problem behavior, teacher-child conflict, teacher-child intimacy, pro-sociality, flow, emotion regulation, happiness, playfulness, mothers' parenting efficacy, adjustment to ECEC centers, gender of children, psychological health, and peer interaction. Through this study, we have identified and discussed the key topics related to the resilience of young children, explored the variables influencing their resilience, and examined strategies for enhancing their resilience. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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108. Chinese Adolescents' Sibling Conflicts: Links With Maternal Involvement in Sibling Relationships and Coparenting.
- Author
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Chen BB
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Authoritarianism, Child, China epidemiology, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Humans, Male, Mothers statistics & numerical data, Parenting trends, Perception physiology, Sibling Relations, Surveys and Questionnaires, Family Conflict psychology, Mother-Child Relations psychology, Mothers psychology, Parenting psychology
- Abstract
This study explored how maternal involvement in sibling relationships and coparenting behaviors were associated with adolescents' sibling conflicts. Adolescents (M
age = 12.25 years; 47.8% boys) and their mothers from 542 families in China participated in this research. Mothers completed questionnaires that assessed their strategies of involvement in sibling relationships, as well as their perceptions of the quality of their coparenting behaviors. Furthermore, adolescents completed questionnaires that assessed sibling conflicts. Results revealed that the mother's positive guidance was negatively related and their authoritarian control was positively related to sibling conflict. A significant interaction was also found between positive maternal guidance in sibling relationships and undermining coparenting behaviors. These findings underscore the unique and interactive effects of mothers' direct involvement in sibling relationships and coparenting behaviors in adolescents' sibling conflicts., (© 2018 Society for Research on Adolescence.)- Published
- 2019
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109. Parent Training Procedures in Mental Health Field: A Systematic Literature Review.
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da Costa Heluany Dias, Mônica and Carolina Sella, Ana
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MENTAL health ,PARENTING ,PARENTING education ,DATABASES ,SOCIALIZATION ,CHILD development ,COLLECTIONS ,PARENT-child relationships - Abstract
Copyright of Psicologia: Teoria e Pesquisa is the property of Universidade de Brasilia, Instituto de Psicologia and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
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- 2023
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110. Roles and capacities of Thai family development centres
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Supprasert, Warunsicha, Hughes, David, and Khajornchaikul, Piyatida
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- 2018
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111. The Grow parenting program: demonstrating proof of concept
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Chesnut, Ryan, DiNallo, Jennifer M., Czymoniewicz-Klippel, Melina T., and Perkins, Daniel F.
- Published
- 2018
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112. Parental health-related quality of life, depression and stress among low-income immigrants
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Kamimura, Akiko, Ashby, Jeanie, Nourian, Maziar, Assasnik, Nushean, Chen, Jason, Tabler, Jennifer, Aguilera, Guadalupe, Blanton, Natalie, Jess, Allison, and Reel, Justine
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- 2018
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113. How the parent-adolescent relationship affects well-being in Dutch parents?
- Author
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De Rooij, Ilona and Gravesteijn, Carolien
- Published
- 2018
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114. Paper tiger?
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Pluviose, David
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More Than a Tiger Mom (Nonfiction work) ,Asian Americans ,Parenting ,Education ,Ethnic, cultural, racial issues/studies - Abstract
Online reaction to the cover story of our May 12 edition, 'More Than a Tiger Morn,' was swift and severe, as numerous DiverseEducation.com readers went back and forth over the [...]
- Published
- 2011
115. Call for Papers: Prospectus for Special Issue of Child Maltreatment : "The Intersection of Intimate Partner Violence and Child Maltreatment".
- Subjects
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MENTAL depression risk factors , *INTIMATE partner violence , *POST-traumatic stress disorder , *CHILD abuse , *CHILD welfare , *CHILDREN'S accident prevention , *INTERGENERATIONAL relations , *MANUSCRIPTS , *PARENTING , *PATHOLOGICAL psychology , *SERIAL publications , *VIOLENCE , *VIOLENCE & psychology - Abstract
The article offers information related to the impact of Intimate Partner Violence (IPV) on the children. It mentions that IPV impacts families at disturbing rates, with a considerable number of children subject to severe, chronic, and multifaceted violence. It also mentions that children exposed to IPV are at elevated risk for emergent psychopathology, including depression, posttraumatic stress disorder, and disruptive behavior disorders.
- Published
- 2019
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116. Parenting and infant mental health promotion: teachers’ views
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Cuddihy, Lynn Carol and Waugh, Anna
- Published
- 2017
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117. Setting limits in uneasy times – healthy diets in underprivileged families
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Ditlevsen, Kia and Nielsen, Annemette
- Published
- 2016
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118. Announcement of the Fulker Award for a Paper Published in Behavior Genetics, Volume 48, 2018.
- Subjects
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BEHAVIOR genetics , *PARENTING , *HUMAN behavior , *ANIMAL genetics , *WORKING parents - Abstract
The Fulker Award was established by the Behavior Genetics Association in memory of David Fulker, a past President of the Association and Executive Editor of the journal, who died in 1998 (Hewitt [2]). Six different papers were nominated by the Associate Editors; this year there was an emphasis on outstanding human empirical and methodological papers, and several that combined both topics. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2019
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119. Adolescent Psychological Assistance Treatment Strategy Integrating Home-School Coordination and Network Information.
- Author
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Li, Yaling
- Subjects
SOCIAL support ,MEDICAL care for teenagers ,COOPERATIVENESS ,PARENTING ,MENTAL health services ,PARENTS - Abstract
With the continuous satisfaction of material life, teenagers' physical health has been generally improved, and all aspects of competition have posed a challenge to teenagers' mental health. Therefore, both at the family level and at the school level, teenagers' mental health education has been paid more and more attention. The school cooperative education model came into being, which has had an important impact on the mental health education of teenagers. Family education is the first level of education for teenagers. Parents' role model, family education concept, and education model all play a key role in the development of children's mental health. Based on this, this paper will focus on optimizing the home-school cooperation strategy, further clarify the main responsibilities of the school, teachers, and parents in the home-school cooperation education in the strategy, establish and improve the home-school cooperation mechanism based on this, and focus on the cultivation of parents' mental health education and teachers' mental health guidance professional skills in this process. Based on the current situation of network home-school mental health coordination and mental health education, this study takes teenagers as the research object, aiming at the common psychological problems in learning, social adaptation, and interpersonal communication, and tries to study the problems of promoting teenagers' mental health from the perspective of integrity and development. The developed home-school collaboration method is to verify that the network home-school collaboration method is more effective than the traditional home-school collaboration method in promoting the mental health development of primary school students, so as to provide a reference for the theory and practice of home-school collaboration under the network environment to carry out mental health education. According to the corresponding network information intelligent algorithm, this paper constantly adjusts the coordination strategy between family and school and guides teenagers to internalize the corresponding excellent behaviour into their own habits. In the experimental part, the psychological assistance treatment scheme proposed in this paper is verified and analysed. The experimental results show that the psychological assistance treatment program for adolescents proposed in this paper has obvious effects. School education has a special mental health counseling center and special psychological teachers, which can carry out mental health education more scientifically. The unity and cooperation between family education and school education can combine the educational power of parents and schools to fully develop the mental health of teenagers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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120. Call for Papers: Parenting and Family Dynamics in Times of COVID-19.
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AUTHORSHIP , *DEVELOPMENTAL psychology , *MANUSCRIPTS , *HEALTH policy , *PARENTING , *PUBLISHING , *FAMILY relations , *COVID-19 - Abstract
The article offers information on how to submit manuscripts for an issue of the "Developmental Psychology" journal about parenting and family dynamics during COVID-19.
- Published
- 2020
121. The roles of bullying involvement and parental warmth in non-suicidal self-harm and suicidal ideation among adolescents from residential program
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Wright, Michelle F.
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- 2016
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122. Parental interpretations of “childhood innocence” : Implications for early sexuality education
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McGinn, Laura, Stone, Nicole, Ingham, Roger, and Bengry-Howell, Andrew
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- 2016
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123. Pioneer Paper: An Accidental Scientist: Chance, Failure, Risk-Taking, and Mentoring.
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McGrath, Patrick J
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SCIENTISTS ,STUDENT health services ,MEDICAL education ,MEDICAL care ,PAIN management - Abstract
I never intended to become a scientist. My career developed on the basis of chance happenings, repeated failure, the willingness to take risks and the acceptance and provision of mentoring. My career has included periods of difficulty and shifted back and forth between academic health centers and universities in Canada. Although I have been amply recognized for my successes, my greatest learning has come from my failures. My greatest satisfaction has been in the development, evaluation and dissemination of interventions. The combination of intellectual stimulation and emotional gratification has meant a rewarding career. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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124. Lions or Cheetahs? Who is Responsible for Raising Kids in Faith?
- Author
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Douglass, Katherine M.
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INTERGENERATIONAL relations ,PARENT attitudes ,CHRISTIAN education ,FAMILY relations ,CHEETAH - Abstract
Scripture encourages parents to pass on faith to children, and a multitude of studies show that the biggest predictor of the faith of kids is the faith of their parents. However, raising kids in faith is more complicated and nuanced than simple "parent to child" religious transmission. In this paper, animal family models are used to explore the relationship between congregations and families. By engaging instructions from scripture, research on changing household structures, and contemporary perspectives on parenting, this paper offers a new way of thinking about religious transmission within intergenerational family relationships and the uniquely central role for congregations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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125. I need you to survive: a qualitative exploration of family-based beliefs among resettled Congolese refugee women in the USA.
- Author
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Spates, Kamesha, Evans, Na'Tasha, Smith, Jordan, Gairola, Richa, Jindra, Rebecca, Guttoo, Parishma, Mubikayi Kabasele, Cedric, Kirkland, Chelsey, and Aminu, PraiseGod
- Subjects
FAMILIES & psychology ,EMIGRATION & immigration ,ACCULTURATION ,PSYCHOLOGY of refugees ,HUMAN beings ,STATISTICAL sampling ,INTERVIEWING ,PSYCHOLOGY of women ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,PARENTING ,THEMATIC analysis ,METROPOLITAN areas ,RESEARCH methodology ,SOCIAL support ,INTERPERSONAL relations - Abstract
Purpose: The prevalence of Congolese refugee women seeking asylum in the USA has recently garnered substantial attention. Many women have fled the Democratic Republic of Congo due to trauma and loss. Likewise, the resettlement process, particularly acculturative stress, may exacerbate mental health issues such as depression and anxiety. By recognizing the centrality of family within Congolese culture, this study aims to investigate cultural beliefs about family among Congolese refugee women in the USA, using acculturative theory as an interpretative lens. Design/methodology/approach: The authors' study centered on understanding the resettlement experiences of 20 Congolese refugee women living within an urban area of Midwest America after their arrival in America since 2011. Through using convenient sampling methods, the authors chose these particular activists as they could provide insight into their stories concerning their journey from Congo to settling down as refugees within Northeast America. During interviews, semi-structured questioning was used to gather responses from participants which were later analyzed through implementing a thematic interpretation process. Findings: Three themes emerged encapsulating cultural beliefs about family: supporting one another; the importance of togetherness; and disciplining our children. These findings provide culturally tailored resources to support Congolese refugee women and their families upon resettlement optimally. Research limitations/implications: The authors' work provides health equity researchers with an opportunity to better understand cultural beliefs among Congolese refugee women. Findings from this study provide an increased understanding of how to provide culturally specific tools to better aid Congolese refugee women and their families upon arrival. Practical implications: The authors' research offers insights for health equity researchers seeking to understand the cultural beliefs of Congolese refugee women. The findings contribute to an enhanced understanding of how to provide culturally specific resources better to support Congolese refugee women and their families upon arrival. Originality/value: The authors verify that, to the best of the authors' knowledge, the paper was written completely independently, and neither the entire work nor any of its parts have been previously published. The authors confirm that the paper has not been submitted to peer review, nor is in the process of peer reviewing, nor has been accepted for publishing in another journal. The authors confirm that the research in their work is original. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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126. No child left behind, literacy challenges ahead: a focus on the Philippines.
- Author
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Gatcho, Al Ryanne Gabonada, Manuel, Jeremiah Paul Giron, and Hajan, Bonjovi Hassan
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LITERACY programs ,LITERACY ,PARENTING ,EDUCATIONAL quality ,LITERACY education ,EDUCATIONAL equalization - Abstract
The Sustainable Development Goal 4 has commenced a global mandate to provide equitable access to quality education for everyone. In the Philippines, SDG 4 inaugurates the No Child Left Behind (NCLB) Policy. This brief argues that while the NCLB has ensured equal access to quality literacy education, it poses socioeconomic-based challenges, declining rate of parental involvement in their children's schooling, overemphasis on standardized tests, and the lack of community involvement towards literacy programs. The Holistic Literacy Enhancement Program (HLEP) is proposed in this paper to help address these challenges to NCLB. HLEP presents policy implications that could assist the NCLB in more efficient and effective implementation: equitable resource allocation, parental and community engagement, and culturally and linguistically relevant assessment tools. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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127. Do peer‐based short‐form educational videos created by nursing students improve youths' knowledge of sexually transmitted diseases? A quasi‐experimental study.
- Author
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Dolu, İlknur, Bozkurt, Feyza Demir, Bulut, Ebru, Yıldırım, İlayda, and Dilcen, Hacer Yalnız
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PREVENTION of sexually transmitted diseases ,HEALTH literacy ,REPEATED measures design ,T-test (Statistics) ,CRONBACH'S alpha ,DATA analysis ,AFFINITY groups ,EDUCATIONAL outcomes ,CLINICAL trials ,MEDICAL care ,FISHER exact test ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,INTERNET ,CHI-squared test ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,PARENTING ,PRE-tests & post-tests ,RESEARCH methodology ,ONE-way analysis of variance ,STATISTICS ,HEALTH education ,COMPARATIVE studies ,VIDEO recording ,NURSING students ,ADOLESCENCE - Abstract
Background: The prevalence of sexually transmitted diseases (STDs) remains high worldwide in today's society, especially among young people. Youth education on STDs could help to reduce the prevalence of the condition in society and prevent new cases. Aim: The aim of this study is to assess the effectiveness of peer‐based short‐form educational videos on youths' knowledge of STDs. Methods: This quasi‐experimental study was conducted in Turkey. The sample consisted of 121 students divided into experimental and control groups. Pre‐ and post‐test control group quasi‐experimental research design was employed in this study during the spring semester of the academic year 2021–2022. Peer‐based short‐form educational videos created by nursing students were used as an intervention. The survey form and Sexually Transmitted Disease Knowledge Questionnaire were used to collect data. Results: Participants with parental responsibilities and had previous STD experience had higher knowledge score than the other subgroups. There was a significant main effect of peer‐based short‐form educational video on participants overall knowledge score of STDs. Additionally, the effect of intervention continued at 12‐week follow‐up measurement. Conclusion: Peer‐based short‐form educational videos increase young people's knowledge of STD, and the impact of the intervention continued at 12‐week follow up. Summary statement: What is already known about this topic? Sexually transmitted diseases continue to be prevalent in society, particularly among young people.Sexually transmitted diseases can lead to serious health conditions and have a significant impact on sexual and reproductive health.The effectiveness of internet‐based education and lectures on sexually transmitted diseases has already been investigated.Little research has been addressed to determine the impact of educational materials, which are short videos on knowledge of sexually transmitted diseases created by utilizing nursing students' peer assessment. What this paper adds? Peer‐based short‐form educational videos increase young people's sexually transmitted disease knowledge.People with parental responsibilities and a previous sexually transmitted infections responded to interventions more favourably.The effects of peer‐based short‐form educational videos persisted 3 months afterwards. The implications for this paper: This cost‐free method has a potential to be widely used as a public health intervention to educate young people on sexually transmitted diseases.The peer‐based short‐form educational videos can be combined with other interventions to increase young people's knowledge of sexually transmitted diseases. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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128. Intervention strategies promoting parental subjective well-being: an integrative review.
- Author
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da Silva, Antonio Carlos Santos, Alvarenga, Patrícia, and Paixão, Catiele
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SUBJECTIVE well-being (Psychology) ,MENTAL health personnel ,PARENTING ,WEB-based user interfaces ,WELL-being ,LIFE satisfaction - Abstract
High levels of parental subjective well-being are associated with frequent use of efficient parenting practices, which motivated the development and assessment of programs intended to promote parental subjective well-being. This integrative review aimed to analyze the intervention strategies used to promote subjective well-being among parents of 0 to 11-year-old children. The search was conducted in the Web of Science, Scopus, PsycINFO, PubMed, and LILACS databases, considering papers written in English, Spanish, or Portuguese, published up to March 2022. Two judges collected and analyzed data independently, using the Rayyan web application. Eleven papers met the inclusion criteria and described 21 strategies to promote parental subjective well-being applied to 4,579 participants. The strategies were classified as behavioral, cognitive, or emotional. The interventions influencing only the affective dimension of parental subjective well-being included only behavioral and cognitive strategies. On the other hand, the interventions that enhanced both affective and cognitive dimensions included strategies addressing emotional variables besides behavioral and cognitive variables. Policymakers and mental health professionals must prioritize interventions that include components based on these three categories of variables to enhance parents' well-being. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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129. An Odd Couple with Promise: Researchers and Practitioners in Evaluation Settings
- Author
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Myers-Walls, Judith A.
- Published
- 2000
130. Parenting and mental health in protracted refugee situations: a systematic review.
- Author
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Khraisha Q, Abujaber N, Carpenter S, Crossen RJ, Kappenberg J, Kelly R, Murphy C, Norton O, Put SM, Schnoebelen K, Warraitch A, Roney S, and Hadfield K
- Subjects
- Humans, Anxiety psychology, Depression psychology, Stress, Psychological psychology, Parents psychology, Refugees psychology, Parenting psychology, Mental Health
- Abstract
Background: Refugees' parenting behaviour is profoundly influenced by their mental health, which is, in turn, influenced by their situation of displacement. Our research presents the first systematic review on parenting and mental health in protracted refugee situations, where 78% of all refugees reside., Methods: We pre-registered our protocol and screened documents in 22 languages from 10 electronic databases, reports by 16 international humanitarian organisations and region-specific content from the top 100 websites for each of the 72 countries that 'host' protracted refugees. Our criteria were empirical papers reporting parenting and parental mental health data on refugees who are in a protracted refugee situation. Studies including only internally displaced or stateless persons were excluded., Results: A total of 18,125 documents were screened and 30 studies were included. We identified a universal pathway linking macro-level stressors in protracted refugee situations, such as movement restrictions and documentation issues, to symptoms of depression and anxiety, which, in turn, led to negative parenting practices. Addtionally, culture-specific pathways were observed in the way parental mental health and parenting were expressed. Situational (e.g., overcrowding) and relational factors (e.g., spousal dynamics) modulated both of these pathways. Biases in the research included the over-representation of specific protracted refugee situations, overreliance on self-reported data, and a heavy focus on mothers while neglecting fathers and other caregivers. Longitudinal research is needed to clarify the directionality and causality between specific macro-level stressors in a given protracted refugee situation and parental mental health and practices. Refugees were rarely consulted or involved in the design of research about their parenting and parental mental health., Conclusion: In recognising the existing links between protracted refugee situations, parental mental health, and parenting, our systematic review calls for a shift in thinking: from focusing solely on the micro aspects that affect 'refugee parenting' to understanding and tackling the broader macro-level stressors that drive them. We urge for larger and long-term research efforts that consider diverse protracted refugee situations, greater investment in science communication and diplomacy with governments, and stronger implementation of durable solutions by states to alleviate the roots of refugee parents' distress and negative parenting practices., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest None., (Copyright © 2024 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2024
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131. The Reflective Fostering Programme-Adapting a group parenting programme for online delivery in response to the COVID-19 pandemic in the United Kingdom.
- Author
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Redfern S, Pursch B, Katangwe-Chigamba T, Sopp R, Irvine K, Sprecher EA, Schwaiger T, and Midgley N
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- Humans, United Kingdom, Telemedicine, Foster Home Care, Caregivers education, Caregivers psychology, Psychotherapy, Group methods, Adult, Female, Male, COVID-19, Parenting psychology
- Abstract
Objective: In the context of the Covid-19 pandemic and subsequent lockdown restrictions, service providers faced significant challenges in delivering programmes to support their vulnerable service users. Foster carers-an already often isolated group of caregivers - were offered an adapted remote-delivery model of the Reflective Fostering Programme (Redfern et al., Adopt. Foster., 42, 2018, 234) from March 2020., Method: This paper outlines the adaptation process of the original programme to online-remote delivery and describes the feedback from participants in the programme., Results: The adaptation of the Reflective Fostering programme to online, remote delivery had both strengths and weaknesses - including wider access to foster carers who might struggle to attend in person and challenge a to maintaining a Mentalizing space online and ensuring confidentiality within a therapeutic space. The programme was overwhelmingly well received by foster carers in this format., Conclusions: There are opportunities and challenges in the delivery of online therapeutic services, particularly those with a group format. This paper contributes initial reflections to what we hope will be a rapidly developing literature on best practice of supporting group services in an online format., (© 2023 The British Psychological Society.)
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- 2024
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132. Differences in parental behaviour, emotions, and cognitions between children's eating profiles.
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Edwards KL, Pickard A, Farrow C, Haycraft E, Herle M, Llewellyn C, Croker H, and Blissett J
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- Humans, Female, Male, Child, Preschool, Child, Surveys and Questionnaires, Adult, Child Behavior psychology, Parenting psychology, Cognition, Emotions, Feeding Behavior psychology, Parents psychology, Parent-Child Relations
- Abstract
A variety of parent psychological characteristics (e.g., wellbeing) have been related to children's eating behaviour. However, parent-child feeding interactions are reciprocal and complex, including relationships between parental cognitions, emotions, as well as the influence of children's varying appetitive traits. Using a person-centred approach, children's appetitive traits can be clustered into meaningful eating profiles. To date, no research has examined whether parental behaviours, emotions, and cognitions differ depending on a child's eating profile. Hence, this study recruited parents/primary caregivers from the APPETItE project, whose child had previously been identified as having an avoidant, typical, happy, or avid eating profile. Parents/primary caregivers of children (3-6 years; N = 632) completed online questionnaires examining broader parenting behaviour (parenting styles), parental emotions (stress, wellbeing), and parental cognitions (goals, self-efficacy, time and energy for meal planning and preparation, and perceptions about children's body size). Findings showed significant differences in parent responses to the questionnaires based on children's eating profiles. Parents of children with a happy eating profile reported better psychological wellbeing and greater parenting time and energy for meal planning and preparation, as well as being less likely to report goals of avoiding mealtime stress and conflict. In contrast, parents of children with an avoidant eating profile reported poorer psychological wellbeing. Children with an avid eating profile were perceived by parents as having a higher body weight, whereas children with an avoidant eating profile were perceived as having a lower body weight. Overall, these findings demonstrate that differences in parental characteristics and perceptions exist between children's eating profiles and thus should be considered in the development of tailored interventions to support children's healthy eating., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2024 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2024
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133. Parent's use of coercive control practices with food is associated with poorer emotion regulation and increased emotional overeating in preschoolers.
- Author
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Baker LN and Fuglestad AJ
- Subjects
- Humans, Child, Preschool, Female, Male, Surveys and Questionnaires, Emotions, Adult, Child Behavior psychology, Parent-Child Relations, Parents psychology, Mothers psychology, Hyperphagia psychology, Emotional Regulation, Parenting psychology, Feeding Behavior psychology, Coercion
- Abstract
Emotional overeating is defined as eating in response to emotions. Around the preschool years, there is a shift from emotional undereating to overeating, which suggests environmental influences in the development of overeating. The use of food by parents to control their child's emotions, rather than to teach them appropriate emotion regulation strategies, may impact the child's ability to regulate their own emotions, resulting in emotional overeating. We hypothesized that such coercive control practices with food by parents would be associated with poorer ability of the child to regulate their own emotions, which in turn would lead to increased emotional overeating, but not emotional undereating. Mothers of four- and five-year-olds (N = 221) were recruited through MTurk and Prolific to complete online questionnaires measuring food parenting practices (Comprehensive Feeding Style Questionnaire and Parent Feeding Style Questionnaire), child emotion regulation (Emotion Regulation Checklist), and child emotional eating (Child Eating Behavior Questionnaire). Several mediation models were tested. Parent's use of food to control emotions and behavior was associated with higher levels of emotional overeating, which was mediated by poorer child emotion regulation. However, child emotion regulation did not mediate the association between parent's use of food to control emotions and behavior and the child's emotional undereating. Taken together, these models suggest that parent's use of coercive control with food may lead to child emotional overeating, but not emotional undereating, by teaching children to regulate their emotions through eating rather than more adaptive regulation strategies. Future experimental and longitudinal studies are needed to directly test the nature and direction of these associations and whether coercive control with food teaches children to overeat in response to their emotions in lieu of using appropriate emotion regulation strategies., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2024 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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134. Epigenetic regulation of the oxytocin system as an indicator of adaptation to over-controlling parenting and psychosocial functioning in adulthood.
- Author
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Hellwig AF, Wroblewski KL, Krol KM, Connelly JJ, and Allen JP
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- Humans, Male, Female, Adult, Adolescent, Longitudinal Studies, Young Adult, Psychosocial Functioning, Stress, Psychological genetics, Stress, Psychological metabolism, Stress, Psychological psychology, Receptors, Oxytocin genetics, Receptors, Oxytocin metabolism, Parenting psychology, Oxytocin metabolism, Oxytocin genetics, Epigenesis, Genetic genetics, Epigenesis, Genetic physiology, DNA Methylation physiology, Adaptation, Psychological physiology
- Abstract
The oxytocin system plays a role in social stress adaptation, and this role is likely to be particularly important in adolescence. One method of regulating the oxytocin system is through DNA methylation in the promoter of the oxytocin receptor gene (OXTRm), which reduces the gene's expression. This multi-method, longitudinal study, using a diverse community sample of 184 adolescents followed from age 13-28, examined the links between OXTRm and exposure to over-controlling parenting in adolescence and conflict with romantic partners and internalizing symptoms in adulthood. Female, but not male, adolescents who were exposed to psychologically controlling parenting at age 13 had lower levels of OXTRm at site -924 at age 28. Reduced OXTRm at site -924 was associated with greater romantic partner-reported relationship conflict at age 27, and reduced OXTRm at site -934 was marginally associated with greater participant-reported conflict for males. Reduced OXTRm at site -924 was also associated with fewer internalizing symptoms at ages 24-25. These results in adulthood are consistent with an upregulated oxytocin system reducing the salience of negative socioemotional stimuli. Overall, findings are consistent with oxytocin playing a role in the stress response system, and more specifically, by helping us to adapt to social environments like parenting and romantic relationships, reducing the salience of negativity, and reducing risk for common emotional problems., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2024 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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135. A parenting program delivered through existing community-based peer groups to improve early child development in Homabay and Busia Counties, Kenya: study protocol for a cluster-randomized controlled trial.
- Author
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Jeong J, McCann JK, Onyango S, and Ochieng M
- Subjects
- Humans, Kenya, Infant, Child, Preschool, Infant, Newborn, Rural Population, Program Evaluation, Caregivers education, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Parenting, Peer Group, Child Development
- Abstract
Background: Poor early childhood development (ECD) is a major global health concern that is associated with various adverse outcomes over the lifecourse. Parenting interventions especially during the earliest years of life can benefit ECD. However, there is limited evidence from Kenya about the effectiveness of parenting interventions for improving ECD outcomes especially across rural disadvantaged communities. This paper describes the study protocol for an impact and implementation evaluation of a community-based group parenting program that aims to improve ECD in rural Kenya., Methods: We will conduct a cluster-randomized controlled trial to determine the effectiveness of a parenting program for caregivers of young children in Homabay and Busia counties in Western Kenya. Sixty-four village clusters will be randomly assigned to either the parenting intervention arm or the waitlist control arm with stratification by county. In each village, 10 primary caregivers with a child aged 0-24 months will be enrolled. The parenting program will be delivered through existing peer groups within communities whereby caregivers will receive counseling and psychosocial support to enhance their parenting skills and wellbeing to in turn promote ECD. The intervention curriculum comprises 21 sessions targeting various nurturing care messages, including early learning, responsive caregiving, child nutrition, health, protection, and caregiver mental health. Group sessions are facilitated by a trained volunteer biweekly for a total of 11 months. The primary trial outcome is an overall measure of ECD using the Global Scales of Early Development long form version. Secondary outcomes include various caregiver outcomes (e.g., parenting practices, mental health) and other child outcomes (e.g., socioemotional development, dietary diversity). All outcomes will be assessed at baseline and endline. We will also conduct a qualitative implementation evaluation at endline and interview various stakeholders to assess program fidelity, quality, and sustainability., Discussion: This trial will evaluate the effectiveness of a parenting intervention on ECD and caregiving outcomes and assess program implementation quality as delivered through existing community-based peer groups. This study will provide rigorous evidence that can be used to inform scale-up of this program model that leverages existing community social networks and resources for improving caregivers' parenting skills and promoting ECD in rural Kenya and other similar settings across LMICs., Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov #NCT06165315. Registered on December 11, 2023., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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136. Preparing for parenthood: Validating a mixed method approach to assessing the coparenting capacity of young expectant fathers and mothers.
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Florsheim P and Burrow-Sánchez JJ
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- Humans, Female, Male, Adult, Pregnancy, Young Adult, Interpersonal Relations, Reproducibility of Results, Adolescent, Hostility, Fathers psychology, Parenting psychology, Mothers psychology
- Abstract
The transition to parenthood (TP) interview and coparenting capacity (CC) coding scheme is a mixed method approach to evaluating readiness for the interpersonal challenges of parenthood. This paper focuses on the validation of the TP-CC system with a diverse sample of 140 young expectant father/mother pairs. The TP interview is designed to assist expectant parents in expressing their thoughts and feelings about parenthood and coparenting and the CC coding scheme is designed to assess a new parent's capacity for expressing fondness, acceptance, growth, cohesion, and commitment in their relationship with their coparenting partner. Convergent validation of the TP-CC system involved measuring self- and partner-reported relationship quality, relationship security, and observed warmth and hostility during the pregnancy. Predictive validation focused on the same set of variables, measured at the 6-month postbirth follow-up. Results supported the convergent validity of the TP-CC system for mothers and fathers, with higher-specific CC scores correlating with higher relationship quality, relationship security and warmth scores, as well as lower hostility scores. Results partially supported predictive validity, with fathers' total CC scores predicting fathers' interpersonal hostility and mothers' relationship quality, relationship security, hostility, and warmth at follow-up. Consistently positive and significant correlations between both mothers and fathers prebirth and postbirth CC scores provide evidence for the test-retest reliability of the TP-CC system. Generally, findings demonstrate the potential utility of the TP-CC system for evaluating coparenting readiness across the transition to parenthood., (© 2023 Family Process Institute.)
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- 2024
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137. The employment expectations of adolescents: Examining the role of social origin, parental support, and personality traits.
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Esche F and Böhnke P
- Subjects
- Humans, Adolescent, Female, Male, Cross-Sectional Studies, Germany, Surveys and Questionnaires, Parent-Child Relations, Parents psychology, Socioeconomic Factors, Employment psychology, Personality, Parenting psychology
- Abstract
Early life course conditions and the social origin of families frequently influence the inequalities people experience in adulthood. The transition from education to work is a challenging period during which adolescents make their first employment-related choices and establish the course of their careers. Future expectations guide adolescents' employment-related choices and are assumed to influence future employment outcomes. Therefore, this paper investigates whether family (dis)advantages affect adolescents' employment expectations. We assess various underlying mechanisms that may influence the relationship between social origin and adolescents' employment expectations by using cross-sectional data from the German Socio-Economic Panel (SOEP: 2006-2018), specifically a youth questionnaire administered at age 17. Three key findings emerge. First, family disadvantages, particularly an insecure parental labor market participation, influence the employment expectations of adolescents negatively. Second, supportive parenting does not mediate the relationship between social origin and the employment expectations of adolescents; instead, it functions as an additional positive factor. Third, supportive parenting creates more optimistic employment expectations because it fosters specific "beneficial" personality traits, such as extraversion, conscientiousness, openness, agreeableness, and internal control beliefs., (Copyright © 2024 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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138. Examining the relationship between digital parenting self-efficacy and digital parenting awareness of early adolescents' parents.
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Kalkim A, Konal Korkmaz E, and Uysal Toraman A
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- Humans, Female, Male, Cross-Sectional Studies, Adolescent, Adult, Surveys and Questionnaires, Internet, Adolescent Behavior psychology, Self Efficacy, Parenting psychology, Parents psychology, Parents education, Parent-Child Relations
- Abstract
Purpose: This study aimed to investigate the variables that affect early adolescents' parents' digital self-efficacy and digital parenting awareness., Design and Methods: A cross-sectional study was conducted between May and June 2022, with a sample of 2402 parents. Data were collected using a Parent Information Form, Digital Parenting Awareness Scale, and Digital Parenting Self-Efficacy Scale. The data were analysed using independent t-tests, Pearson correlations, and one-way ANOVA analysis., Results: All parents have internet access at home and on their phones, and they all use the internet. The average daily internet usage time is 4.48 ± 2.09 h. A positive correlation was found between the average scores of parents' digital literacy (r = -0.111; p < 0.001) and digital communication (r = 0.089; p < 0.001). It was determined that the average digital communication subscale score of parents with a primary school degree was higher than that of parents with a university degree or higher (F = 2.783, p = 0.040). It was found that there was no statistical correlation between the amount of time parents spend on the internet daily and their total score and subscale scores of digital self-efficacy (p > 0.05)., Conclusion: This study's results demonstrate that parents are proficient in digital security, digital literacy, and digital communication. Additionally, there is a significant correlation between digital literacy, digital communication, and digital parenting awareness., Practice Implications: The study results could guide the development of future interventions to enhance parents' awareness and competence in digital safety and the use of digital tools., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2024 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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139. Risk factors for technology addiction in young children ages 2-5 years.
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Pazarcikci F
- Subjects
- Humans, Female, Male, Child, Preschool, Cross-Sectional Studies, Turkey, Risk Factors, Parent-Child Relations, Parents psychology, Behavior, Addictive psychology, Adult, Stress, Psychological, Parenting psychology
- Abstract
Purpose: This study was conducted to determine the factors predictive of technology addiction in young children (aged 2-5 years). The study examined the effects of digital parenting awareness, parental stress, family demographic characteristics and parents' technology use habits on technology addiction in young children., Design and Methods: This cross-sectional study was conducted between October 2023 and February 2024 with 401 volunteer parents of children aged 2-5 years in a province in the Western Mediterranean region of Turkey. Data were collected using the Technology Addiction Scale for Ages 2-5, the Digital Parental Awareness Scale, and the Parental Stress Scale., Results: Digital parenting awareness, negative modeling and digital neglect, and parental stress positively and directly affect technology addiction in young children (β
1 = 0.166, β2 = 0.443, β3 = 0.087, all p < 0.05). Additionally, parental gender (β = 0.095), parental marital status (β = 0.092), and household income (β = 0.088) were significant predictors of technology addiction in young children (p < 0.05). The level of technology addiction is significantly higher in children who use devices without parental controls (Z = -6.187, p < 0.001)., Conclusions: Low digital parenting awareness, high parental stress, male caregivers, low household income and single-parent families in digital tools increase the risk of technology addiction in young children (2-5 years). Multidisciplinary, family-oriented intervention programs, incorporating consideration of parental risk factors, should be developed to prevent and reduce technology addiction in this group., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The author declares that there are no competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2024 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2024
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140. The mediator role of parenting stress in the effect of stigmatization on burnout in parents of children with autism: A structural equality model.
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Gülbetekin E, Kardaş Özdemir F, and Aşut G
- Subjects
- Humans, Female, Male, Child, Adult, Stress, Psychological psychology, Autism Spectrum Disorder psychology, Parent-Child Relations, Social Stigma, Burnout, Psychological psychology, Surveys and Questionnaires, Child, Preschool, Autistic Disorder psychology, Parents psychology, Parenting psychology
- Abstract
Purpose: The purpose of this study was to report on the mediator role of parenting stress in the effect of stigmatization on burnout in parents of children with autism., Design and Methods: A descriptive and correlational research design was used in this study. The sample consisted of 146 parents who had children diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder and volunteered to participate in the study. A "Personal Information Form", the "Parents' Internalized Stigma of Mental Illness Scale", the "Parenting Stress Scale", and the "Parental Burnout Assessment" were used for data collection., Results: In the study, it was observed that the feeling of stigmatization increased as the education level increased and that variables such as the ages of the parent and the child and an increase in the number of children requiring care also affected the feeling of stigmatization. Parenting stress was found to have a "partial mediator" role in the effect of stigmatization on parental burnout., Conclusion: Our findings emphasized the heterogeneous correlation between stigmatization, burnout, and stress levels of parents of children with autism., Practice Implications: This study has key implications for pediatric nursing practices. Pediatric nurses can educate the community about autism, what issues should be considered, and how to support parents. Furthermore, nurses can introduce parents who have children with autism to each other and direct them to parent-child activities that can regulate their moods., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2024 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2024
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141. A Qualitative Study of Maternal Perceptions of Stress and Parenting During Early Childhood.
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Elansary M, Brochier A, Urbina-Johanson S, Wexler MG, Messmer E, Pierce LJ, and McCoy DC
- Subjects
- Humans, Female, Child, Preschool, Adult, Infant, Male, Social Support, Grounded Theory, Mother-Child Relations psychology, Young Adult, Parenting psychology, Stress, Psychological psychology, Mothers psychology, Qualitative Research, Poverty
- Abstract
Objective: Exposure to maternal stress in early childhood can increase risk for learning and behavior challenges. We sought to gain in-depth understanding of how mothers perceive stressors to impact child wellbeing and identify mothers' strategies for navigating stressors with their young children., Methods: We recruited English- and Spanish-speaking mothers from a primary care clinic serving predominantly publicly insured children. Twenty-one mothers (aged >18 years) of children (aged 6-29 months) participated in in-depth, semi-structured interviews to discuss their experiences and beliefs regarding stress and parenting. Interviews were recorded, transcribed verbatim, and analyzed using the constant comparative method associated with a grounded theory approach., Results: We developed the following hypothesized explanatory model based on our key thematic findings: Mothers described a dyadic model of stress, whereby both their children's and their own experiences of and responses to stressors are interdependent. Mothers use preventive and responsive buffering to mitigate the impact of stress on their children; however, their access to resources, including social and financial support, shapes their capacity for implementing such strategies. Affection and other forms of relational support may function to protect against the negative impacts of stress., Conclusion: In the setting of poverty-related chronic stressors, mothers play an active role in mitigating the impact of stress on their children's wellbeing through responsive caregiving. Policies aimed at reducing poverty-related stress exposures and experiences among low-income families may be key interventions for promoting responsive caregiving during a critical time in child development., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2024 Academic Pediatric Association. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2024
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142. Abstracts of papers and posters presented at the 2001 Annual Conference of the Society for Reproductive and Infant Psychology.
- Author
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Allen, Theresa, Cox, Sara, Eatough, Virginia, Underwood, Jean, Alvarez, Marissa, Srot, J.E.V. Appleton, Morgan, R., Redmond, E., Axia, Giovanna, Weisner, Thomas S., Baston, Helen A., Green, Josephine M., Easton, Sue C., Berryman, J.C., Ockleford, E.M., Hsu, R., Moss, L., Patterson, M., and Browne, Allyson
- Subjects
INFANT psychology ,CHILD development ,PARENTING - Abstract
Presents several abstracts of papers and posters discussed at the 2001 Annual Conference of the Society for Reproductive and Infant Psychology. 'Early Infant Distress and the Caregiving Context in a Danish Sample,' by Marissa Alvarez; 'Families of the Reproductive Revolution: Parenting and Child Development,' by Susan Golombok.
- Published
- 2001
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143. Affective awareness in parenting of fathers with co‐occurring substance abuse and intimate partner violence
- Author
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Smith Stover, Carla, Spink, Andrea, and Gilchrist, Gail
- Published
- 2012
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144. Kinship Idioms and Care-Control Dynamics in Hungarian Co-ethnic Philanthropy.
- Author
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Zakariás, Ildikó
- Subjects
KINSHIP ,INTERPERSONAL relations ,IDIOMS ,COMMUNITIES ,POWER (Social sciences) - Abstract
The paper investigates processes and consequences of 'philanthropic kinning', that is the use of kinship and family idioms in constructing and maintaining personal relations between donors and recipients in philanthropy. Usual studies collapse the occurrence of kinship metaphors in philanthropy either as evidence of 'prosociality' (e.g. trust, care or love) or more frequently as evidence of 'paternalism' (power and domination of donors over recipients, and their objectification). This paper claims that introducing kinship and parenting studies into researching philanthropy would greatly refine our understanding of donor–recipient relations. In the framework of a qualitative case study of a philanthropic 'godparenthood' programme organised in Hungary supporting ethnic Hungarian communities in Romania, this paper looks at the roles, responsibilities and obligations various forms of philanthropic kinship offer for the participants; and relations of power unfolding in helping interactions. With such concerns, this paper complements earlier research on hybridisation of philanthropy, through its sectoral entanglements with kinship and family. Also, it contributes to research on inequalities in philanthropy, by showing how philanthropic kinning may recreate, modify or reshape donor–recipient power relations in diverse ways. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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145. Toward a New Theory of Established Adulthood.
- Author
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Mehta, Clare M. and Arnett, Jeffrey Jensen
- Subjects
LIFE change events ,GENDER role ,CULTURE ,WELL-being ,DEVELOPMENTAL psychology ,SERIAL publications ,EXPERIENCE ,PARENTING ,RELIGION - Abstract
In this introduction to the special issue of the Journal of Adult Development on Established Adulthood, we begin by providing a brief overview of the conceptualization of Established Adulthood. We then provide an overview of each paper included in the special issue, highlighting how this work contributes to the growing field of established adulthood by answering important questions and proposing new ones. Taken together, this collection of articles lay the groundwork for continued theorizing and research in a new, exciting, and flourishing area of developmental research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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146. A review of the relationship between poverty and child abuse and neglect: Insights from scoping reviews, systematic reviews and meta‐analyses.
- Author
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Skinner, Guy C. M., Bywaters, Paul W. B., and Kennedy, Eilis
- Subjects
CHILD abuse ,PSYCHOLOGY information storage & retrieval systems ,ONLINE information services ,META-analysis ,MEDICAL information storage & retrieval systems ,SOCIAL determinants of health ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,FOOD security ,EXECUTIVES ,RISK assessment ,PARENTING ,SOCIAL classes ,INTERSECTIONALITY ,POVERTY ,LITERATURE reviews ,MEDLINE ,GREY literature ,PSYCHOLOGICAL distress - Abstract
An up‐to‐date and accurate picture of the evidence on the impact of poverty is a necessary element of the debate about the future direction of children's social care services internationally. The purpose of this paper is to update evidence about the relationship between poverty and child abuse and neglect (CAN) published since a previous report in 2016 (Bywaters et al., 2016). A systematic search was conducted, identifying seven reviews. Poverty was found to be consistently and strongly associated with maltreatment, be that in terms of familial or community‐level poverty, or in terms of economic security. Findings demonstrated that both the type and the quantity of economic insecurities impacted child maltreatment. Certain economic insecurities – income losses, cumulative material hardship and housing hardship – reliably predicted future child maltreatment. Likewise, as families experienced more material hardship, the risk for maltreatment intensified. In some studies, the relationship between poverty and maltreatment differed by abuse type. Future reviews need to investigate individual papers and their findings across different CAN measures, definitions, samples, abuse types and conceptualisations of poverty to provide a comprehensive understanding of the current research base and the directions which need to be taken to further understand and prevent CAN. Key Practitioner Messages: Poverty should be a central theme in work with families, and visible in assessments, case conferences and court reports.Research indicates that child protection practices need to move away from a narrow focus on parental risk to harmful contexts and ways of addressing these in which society, communities and families can provide environments where harm is minimised, and children are enabled to flourish.Further research is needed to better understand the relationship between poverty and CAN. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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147. ICAR7 Special Issue: New Perspectives on Adoption Research.
- Author
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Ferrari, Laura, Rosnati, Rosa, and Ranieri, Sonia
- Subjects
SIBLINGS ,ADAPTABILITY (Personality) in children ,FATHERS' attitudes ,FAMILY relations ,PSYCHOLOGY of adopted children ,FATHER-child relationship ,PARENTING ,SOCIAL skills in children ,ATTITUDES of mothers ,MOTHER-child relationship ,DISCRIMINATION (Sociology) ,ADOPTION ,WELL-being - Abstract
This Special Issue includes nine original, empirical papers selected from the 7th International Conference on Adoption Research. In the interest of disseminating the new empirical knowledge and science-based interventions to adoption stakeholders, these papers reflect what can be considered some of the most stimulating and innovative lines of research in the recent adoption literature. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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148. The Association Between Facilitator Competent Adherence and Outcomes in Parenting Programs: a Systematic Review and SWiM Analysis.
- Author
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Martin, M., Steele, B., Spreckelsen, T. F., Lachman, J. M., Gardner, F., and Shenderovich, Y.
- Subjects
PARENTING ,BEHAVIOR disorders in children - Abstract
There is increasing interest about the fidelity with which interventions are implemented because it is theorized that better implementation fidelity by facilitators is associated with better participant outcomes. However, in the parenting program literature, there is mixed evidence on the relationship between implementation fidelity and outcomes. This paper provides a synthesis of the evidence on the relationship between facilitator delivery and outcomes in the parenting program literature. Following PRISMA guidelines, this paper synthesizes the results of a systematic review of studies on parenting programs aiming to reduce violence against children and child behavior problems. Specifically, it examines associations between observational measures of facilitator competent adherence and parent and child outcomes. A meta-analysis was not feasible due to study heterogeneity. As a result, Synthesis Without Meta-Analysis guidelines were followed. Searches in electronic databases, reference searching, forward citation tracking, and expert input identified 9653 articles. After screening using pre-specified criteria, 18 articles were included. The review found that most studies (n = 13) reported a statistically significant positive relationship with at least one parent or child outcome. However, eight studies reported inconsistent findings across outcomes, and four studies found no association with outcomes. The results suggest that better facilitator competent adherence is generally associated with positive parent and child outcomes. However, this finding is weakened by the methodological heterogeneity of included studies and due to the wide variety of ways in which studies conceptualized competent adherence-outcome relationships. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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149. A Digital Health Model for School-Based Implementation to Improve Parent and Child Outcomes: Comparison of Active Versus Light-Touch Coaching Effects.
- Author
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Connell AM, Stormshak EA, Mauricio AM, Hails KA, Ramirez-Miranda J, and Inyangson JI
- Subjects
- Humans, Child, Female, Male, Adult, Mobile Applications, Adolescent, School Health Services, COVID-19 prevention & control, COVID-19 epidemiology, Telemedicine, Digital Health, Mentoring methods, Parenting psychology, Parents education, Parents psychology
- Abstract
Online or app-based parenting interventions have become more widely available in recent years. However, challenges related to poor engagement and high attrition have been noted in the literature, and there are important questions regarding ways to enhance parental engagement and improve treatment outcomes through digital health, including through the addition of therapeutic coaches. The current study evaluated differences in the effects of active versus "light-touch" coaching implementations of an enhanced version of Family Check-Up Online (FCU-O) on parent/family and child-level outcomes from pre-treatment to 2-month follow-up assessments. The enhanced version of the FCU-O was adapted to support families in coping with pandemic-related stressors to prevent youth behavioral and emotional problems during middle school and included app-based modules designed to support effective parenting practices as well as virtual coaching. In the "active-coach" condition, parenting coaches were active in efforts to arrange coaching sessions with parents as they worked through the app-based modules, while in the light-touch intervention, parent-coaches enrolled participants in the context of a one-time support session but did not actively pursue families to schedule additional sessions. Parents in the active-coach condition exhibited greater engagement with both the app and coaching sessions than parents in the light-touch condition. Further, stronger improvements in several aspects of parenting and child functioning were observed in the active-coach versus light-touch conditions. However, parents in the light-touch condition showed reductions in stress and comparable levels of dosage when using the app. Implications for prevention and accessibility of digital health interventions are discussed., Competing Interests: Declarations Conflicts of Interest Beth Stormshak has an outside activity agreement with Northwest Prevention Science, LLC, in which she serves as the CEO and co-founder. The University of Oregon remains her primary place of employment and all research activities are attributed to the University of Oregon. She receives royalties related to the product described in this paper. Anne Marie Mauricio and Katherine Hails have outside activity agreements with Northwest Prevention Science, LLC, in which they both serve as a consultant and trainer. The University of Oregon remains their primary place of employment and all research activities are attributed to the University of Oregon. Ethical Approval This study was approved by the University of Oregon Institutional Review Board, and conducted following ethical standards outlined in the Declaration of Helsinki. Consent to Participate Informed consent was obtained from all study participants., (© 2024. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.)
- Published
- 2024
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150. Play With Me: Effects of a shared activities parenting intervention on parenting and relative reinforcing value of food.
- Author
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White HI, Kubiniec E, Savell M, Das Eiden R, Epstein LH, Fabiano GA, Kong KL, and Anzman-Frasca S
- Subjects
- Humans, Female, Male, Child, Preschool, Pilot Projects, Adult, Parents psychology, Pediatric Obesity psychology, Pediatric Obesity prevention & control, Parenting psychology, Reinforcement, Psychology, Parent-Child Relations, Play and Playthings psychology
- Abstract
This pilot randomized controlled trial evaluated impacts of a novel shared activities intervention designed to promote positive parent-child interactions, which may function as an alternative reinforcer to food. The 4-week, at-home Play With Me intervention combines didactic parenting videos and play kits with materials for parent-child activities to practice skills. Aims of the present study were to examine the intervention's acceptability and its effects on parenting and the relative reinforcing value (RRV) of food versus parent-child activity at post-intervention. Thirty-two parents of 4-to-5-year-old children at risk for obesity were randomly assigned to the intervention or a waitlist control group. The intervention was well-liked by parents and feasible. Intervention parents reported more parenting structure and demonstrated higher observed sensitive parenting than controls at post; the latter finding was driven by greater parent positive mood, warmth, positive reinforcement, and relationship quality, with large effect sizes. There were no effects on the RRV of food. Inconsistent with hypotheses, there were trends toward control group parents reporting more parenting satisfaction and efficacy at post. Possible explanations are discussed. Results suggest Play With Me shows promise as an effective and acceptable intervention to promote positive parenting. Further research is needed to examine these effects and their implications for socioemotional development and health in a larger, more diverse sample over a longer time frame., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2024 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2024
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