Search results for "Child rearing"

showing 10 items of 43 documents

Fathers’ marital satisfaction and their involvement with their child with disabilities

2011

The study examines whether fathers’ marital satisfaction – that is, relationships within the parents’ marriage – is correlated with their involvement with their child with disabilities. Data were collected from 243 Polish fathers who were married and who had at least one child with disabilities. The issue was assessed by two measures, the Marital Satisfaction Scale and the Father Involvement Scale. The results show that fathers’ marital satisfaction is significantly (p   0.05) correlated with the fifth component of fathers’ involvement with their child with disabilities, active help in achieving independence by their children.

Activities of daily livingChild rearingMarital satisfactionScale (social sciences)Developmental and Educational PsychologyPsychologyHealth Professions (miscellaneous)EducationClinical psychologyDevelopmental psychologyEuropean Journal of Special Needs Education
researchProduct

Maternal Parenting Styles and Glycemic Control in Children with Type 1 Diabetes

2019

The purpose of this study is to examine differences in parenting styles between mothers of children with type 1 diabetes and mothers of healthy children and to explore relationships between parenting styles and glycemic control of children with diabetes. Mothers of 63 children with diabetes and mothers of 83 children without diabetes reported their parenting styles using the Blocks&rsquo

AdultBlood GlucoseMaleglykeeminen indeksitype 1 diabetesHealth Toxicology and MutagenesisControl (management)Mothers030209 endocrinology & metabolismArticle03 medical and health sciencesChild Rearing0302 clinical medicinechildrenPsychological controlDiabetes mellitusParenting stylesmedicineHumans030212 general & internal medicineChildta515GlycemicType 1 diabetesdiabetesParentingChild rearingbusiness.industrynuoruustyypin diabetesPublic Health Environmental and Occupational Healthta3142medicine.diseaseäiditparenting stylevanhemmatDiabetes Mellitus Type 1kontrolliglycemic controlFemalebusinessClinical psychologyInternational Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
researchProduct

Parenting Warmth and Strictness across Three Generations: Parenting Styles and Psychosocial Adjustment

2020

Recent emergent research is seriously questioning whether parental strictness contributes to children’s psychosocial adjustment in all cultural contexts. We examined cross-generational differences in parental practices characterized by warmth and practices characterized by strictness, as well as the relationship between parenting styles (authoritative, indulgent, authoritarian, and neglectful) and psychosocial adjustment in adulthood. Parenting practices characterized by warmth (affection, reasoning, indifference, and detachment) and strictness (revoking privileges, verbal scolding, and physical punishment) were examined. Psychosocial adjustment was captured with multidimensional self-conce…

AdultMaleHealth Toxicology and Mutagenesismedia_common.quotation_subjectlcsh:Medicine050109 social psychologyEmotional AdjustmentArticleDevelopmental psychologyChild RearingAffectionParenting stylesHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesParent-Child RelationsstrictnessChildmedia_commongenerationsFamily Characteristicsparenting practicesParentingparenting styleslcsh:R05 social sciencesAuthoritarianismPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthLife satisfactionpsychosocial adjustmentGrandparentparenting practices; warmth; strictness; parenting styles; generations; psychosocial adjustmentSelf ConceptwarmthHappinessFemaleThree generationsPsychologyPsychosocial050104 developmental & child psychologyPersonalityInternational Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
researchProduct

Recalled parental rearing behavior in adult women and men with depressive and anxiety symptoms: Findings from a community study.

2020

Objectives: Addressing the lack of population-based data, the purpose of this representative study was to assess sex- and age-specific associations of maternal and paternal rearing behavior with depressiveness and anxiety controlling for sociodemographic and somatic variables. Methods: 8,175 subjects participating in a population-based study completed standardized questionnaires measuring Recalled Parental Rearing Behavior and distress. Results: Women recalled their fathers as more controlling and warmer, and their mothers as more rejecting than men. Comparisons between age groups (≤ 60 vs. > 60 years) revealed that younger participants recalled more parental control and emotional warmth. I…

AdultMalePopulationMothersAnxietyAdult womenFathersChild RearingSex FactorsResidence CharacteristicsSurveys and QuestionnairesMedicineHumansStudy CompletededucationChildDepression (differential diagnoses)education.field_of_studyDepressive Disorderbusiness.industryDepressionAge FactorsAnxiety DisordersDistressMaternal controlMental RecallAnxietyFemalemedicine.symptombusinessParental controlClinical psychologyZeitschrift fur Psychosomatische Medizin und Psychotherapie
researchProduct

Parenting in the face of serious illness: Childhood cancer survivors remember different rearing behavior than the general population

2019

Objective A child's cancer diagnosis and treatment affect the whole family. While it has been recognized that parents are an important resource for their children, little is known about the specifics of parenting in the face of serious illness. Methods We used the Recalled Parental Rearing Behavior Questionnaire in a register-based cohort of adult childhood cancer survivors (CCS) (N = 951) and a representative population sample of the same age range (N = 2042). The questionnaire assesses behavior of mothers and fathers with three scales (emotional warmth, rejection/punishment, and control/overprotection) by querying the (former) child. We compared the two groups using general linear models.…

AdultMalePunishment (psychology)PopulationVulnerabilityExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyDiseaseAffect (psychology)Developmental psychologyYoung Adult03 medical and health sciencesChild Rearing0302 clinical medicineCancer SurvivorsSurvivorship curveParenting stylesHumans030212 general & internal medicineParent-Child RelationsChildeducationeducation.field_of_studyParentingMiddle AgedPsychiatry and Mental healthAdult Survivors of Child Adverse EventsOncology030220 oncology & carcinogenesisCohortFemalePsychologyPsycho-Oncology
researchProduct

Mothers' and fathers' personality and parenting: the mediating role of sense of competence.

2009

This prospective longitudinal study addressed 3 key questions regarding the processes of parenting in a large community sample of mothers (n = 589) and fathers (n = 518). First, the collective impact of parental Big Five personality dimensions on overreactive and warm parenting, assessed 6 years later by adolescents, was examined. Second, mediation of these associations by sense of competence in the parenting role was addressed. Third, it was explored to what extent associations were similar for mothers and fathers. Agreeableness and Extraversion were related to lower levels of overreactivity and higher levels of warmth. Sense of competence completely mediated relations between personality …

AgreeablenessAdultMaleSelf-AssessmentAdolescentPersonality developmentmedia_common.quotation_subjectMothersModels PsychologicalDevelopmental psychologyFathersSurveys and QuestionnairesDevelopmental and Educational PsychologyParenting stylesPersonalityHumansLongitudinal StudiesBig Five personality traitsParent-Child RelationsLife-span and Life-course StudiesChildDemographymedia_commonExtraversion and introversionChi-Square DistributionChild rearingParentingSocial PerceptionChild PreschoolTemperamentFemalePsychologyPersonalityDevelopmental psychology
researchProduct

Beliefs in the necessity of corporal punishment of children and public perceptions of child physical abuse as a social problem.

2008

Child abuseAdultMalePunishmentSocial Problemsmedia_common.quotation_subjectVictimologyCulturePoison controlSocial issuesDevelopmental psychologyChild RearingPunishmentSurveys and QuestionnairesDevelopmental and Educational PsychologymedicineHumansChild AbuseParent-Child RelationsSex DistributionChildmedia_commonSocial environmentMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseSocial relationPsychiatry and Mental healthLogistic ModelsAttitudeSocial PerceptionSpainChild PreschoolPediatrics Perinatology and Child HealthFemalePsychologySocial psychologyCorporal punishmentChild abuseneglect
researchProduct

Is It Considered Violence? The Acceptability of Physical Punishment of Children in Europe

2008

This study analyzes correlates of the acceptability of physical punishment of children in Europe. The design was a three-level ordinal logistic regression of 10,812 people nested within 208 localities (cities), nested within 14 countries of the European Union. Results showed that higher levels of acceptability were reported by men, the older, the less educated, and those who perceived that violence against children was less frequent in their own country. At the country level, the existence of laws prohibiting physical punishment of children as well as a lower number of child maltreatment deaths were significantly associated with lower levels of acceptability of physical punishment of childr…

Child abuseChild rearingPunishmentmedia_common.quotation_subjectPoison controlArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)AnthropologyInjury preventionParenting stylesmedia_common.cataloged_instanceOrdered logitEuropean unionSocioeconomicsPsychologySocial Sciences (miscellaneous)Demographymedia_commonJournal of Marriage and Family
researchProduct

Child-rearing and child abuse antecedents of criminality

1999

A number of studies reviewed here show that those who are exposed to negative child-rearing practices varying from punitive and lax parenting to severe punishment and abuse in childhood tend to be antisocial, aggressive and commit violent crimes later in life. Both the record approach (Widom) studying later outcomes among abused children and the retrospective approach (Lewis) studying violent childhood experiences among offenders provide support for the violence breeds violence hypothesis. It appears clear that punishment in child-rearing increases the risk for maladaptive developmental outcomes but that the mechanism explaining the link between negative parenting and later maladjustment is…

Child abusePunishmentChild rearingmedia_common.quotation_subjectVictimologyHuman factors and ergonomicsPoison controlsocial sciencesSuicide preventionPathology and Forensic MedicineDevelopmental psychologyPsychiatry and Mental healthClinical PsychologyInjury preventionPsychologymedia_commonAggression and Violent Behavior
researchProduct

Trait anxiety and parental child-rearing behavior: Support as a moderator variable?

1988

Abstract Based on central assumptions of the social support literature and on formulations concerning the construction of competence and consequence expectancies, a model for the interaction of maternal and paternal child-rearing behavior in the development of children's trait anxiety is presented. Hypotheses concerning this model are tested empirically; 160 boys and 169 girls (aged 12–14 years) responded to the “Erziehungsstil-Inventar” (“Child-Rearing Inventory”), which serves as a measure of child-rearing styles as perceived by the child, as well as to a German adaptation of the “State-Trait Anxiety Inventory for Children”. General relations between the variables were analyzed by means o…

Child rearingPoison controlHuman factors and ergonomicsModerationSuicide preventionDevelopmental psychologySocial supportInjury preventionmedicineAnxietyGeneral Materials Sciencemedicine.symptomPsychologyClinical psychologyAnxiety Research
researchProduct