Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
316260 Archives of Psychiatric Nursing 2012 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

PurposeThis study examined the association between children's emotion regulatory processes and parents' emotional problems.DesignA 5-year longitudinal study of families from Northwestern United States with data collected over 3 time points. Families were recruited in an effort to oversample for multiracial and African American families because these families have historically not been well represented in research studies.MethodParental hostility characteristics and subclinical levels of depression were assessed in combination with teachers' reports of children's externalizing and internalizing behaviors. Ninety-one families with married parents and an elementary school-aged child participated in the study.FindingsThere was a significant main effect for the association between fathers' self-reports of hostility and teacher reports of children's externalizing behaviors. Neither parental hostility nor depressive symptoms were significantly associated with the children's internalizing behaviors.ConclusionThe results suggest that children's externalizing behaviors are associated with their fathers' dysregulated expression of hostility.Clinical RelevanceParent-child interactions are a key component of children's emotion regulation development. Our findings may guide health care professionals in identifying and intervening in parental behaviors, particularly fathers' behaviors, that may adversely affect the healthy emotional development of their children.

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