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      Parental rearing as a function of parent's own, partner's, and child's anxiety status: Fathers make the difference

      , ,
      Cognition & Emotion
      Informa UK Limited

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          Family issues in child anxiety: attachment, family functioning, parental rearing and beliefs.

          Family studies have found a large overlap between anxiety disorders in family members. In addition to genetic heritability, a range of family factors may also be involved in the intergenerational transmission of anxiety. Evidence for a relationship between family factors and childhood as well as parental anxiety is reviewed. Four groups of family variables are considered: (I) attachment; (II), aspects of family functioning, such as marital conflict, co-parenting, functioning of the family as a whole, and sibling relationships; (III) parental rearing strategies; and (IV) beliefs that parents hold about their child. The reviewed literature provides evidence for an association between each of these family factors and child anxiety. However, there is little evidence as yet that identified family factors are specific to child anxiety, rather than to child psychopathology in general. Moreover, evidence for a relationship between child anxiety and family factors is predominantly cross-sectional. Therefore, whether the identified family factors cause childhood anxiety still needs to be investigated. Further research that investigates mechanisms mediating the relationship between family factors and child anxiety is also called for. Finally, parental beliefs are identified as important predictors of parental behaviour that have largely not been investigated in relation to child anxiety disorders.
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            Variation in Susceptibility to Environmental Influence: An Evolutionary Argument

            Jay Belsky (1997)
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              Parent-child interactions and anxiety disorders: an observational study.

              Past research has indicated a potential link between anxiety and parenting styles that are characterised by control and rejection. However, few studies have utilised observational methods to support these findings. In the current study, mother-child interactions were observed while the child completed two difficult cognitive tasks. The sample consisted of clinically anxious children (n=43), oppositional defiant children (n=20) and non-clinical children (n=32). After adjusting for the age and sex of the child, mothers of anxious children and mothers of oppositional children displayed greater and more intrusive involvement than mothers of non-clinical children. Mothers of anxious children were also more negative during the interactions than mothers of non-clinical children. The differences between anxious and non-clinical interactions were equivalent across three separate age groups. The results support the relationship between an overinvolved parenting style and anxiety but question the specificity of this relationship.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Cognition & Emotion
                Cognition & Emotion
                Informa UK Limited
                0269-9931
                1464-0600
                April 2008
                April 2008
                : 22
                : 3
                : 522-538
                Article
                10.1080/02699930801886706
                1b6f55de-9a66-4fcf-88cd-bd14f31c20c5
                © 2008
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