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Narrative coherence across the transition to parenthood: Primiparous parents' representations of their child in relation to parental sensitivity.

Authors :
Branger, Marjolein C.E.
Emmen, Rosanneke A.G.
Woudstra, Mi-lan J.
Alink, Lenneke R.A.
Mesman, Judi
Source :
Acta Psychologica. Jun2022, Vol. 226, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Narrative coherence reflects parents' ability to provide a believable, clear, relevant, and internally consistent story about their child. Parents demonstrating more narrative coherence have been theorized to show higher parental sensitivity, but this has not been examined in a normative sample, nor across the transition to parenthood, and only once in fathers. The aim of this study was to examine stability and change in narrative coherence across the transition to parenthood in mothers and fathers, as well as the relation between pre- and postnatal narrative coherence and postnatal parental sensitivity. The sample consisted of 105 primiparous expecting parents. Narrative coherence was measured at 36-weeks pregnancy and when the child was 4 months old, using the Five Minute Speech Sample procedure. Parental sensitivity was observed in three episodes. Results demonstrated that narrative coherence was moderately stable (correlations) across the transition to parenthood in fathers only. Both mothers' and fathers' narrative coherence improved over time. Furthermore, mothers and fathers were overall equally coherent, and maternal and paternal narrative coherence were positively interrelated during pregnancy only. Lastly, our findings showed weak evidence for the theorized link between narrative coherence and parental sensitivity: only postnatal narrative coherence predicted paternal sensitivity, only during free play. Our findings give new insight in the development of narrative coherence across the transition to parenthood, and how it relates to actual parenting. More research is needed to confirm our findings and further explore this topic. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00016918
Volume :
226
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Acta Psychologica
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
156469372
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.actpsy.2022.103581