Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
917277 Infant Behavior and Development 2011 11 Pages PDF
Abstract

We explored how parent gender, infant temperament, and coparenting dynamics worked together to shape mothers’ and fathers’ depressive symptoms, stress, and parental efficacy during early parenthood. We were interested in the coparenting relationship as a context that shapes how parents respond to their infant's temperamental qualities. Participants were 139 couples who had recently given birth to their first child. Parent reports of temperament were collected when the infant was 4–8 months old and reports of coparenting and parent adjustment were collected at 13 months. Two-level random intercept models revealed interactions between temperament and coparenting, highlighting the family system as a context for how men and women adapt to their parenting role. There was little evidence for mother–father differences in these associations.

► Negative infant temperament and poor coparenting were risk factors. ► Positive infant temperament and coparenting support were protective factors. ► Few mother–father differences in patterns of association emerged. ► Negative temperament and poor coparenting interacted to predict parent adjustment.

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