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      Parenting Stress and Childhood Psychopathology: An Examination of Specificity to Internalizing and Externalizing Symptoms

      , , ,
      Journal of Psychopathology and Behavioral Assessment
      Springer Nature

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          Parenting Stress and Child Adjustment: Some Old Hypotheses and New Questions

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            Stressors and child and adolescent psychopathology: moving from markers to mechanisms of risk.

            In the first half of this review, the authors critically evaluate existing research on the association between stressors and symptoms of psychopathology in children and adolescents. This analysis reveals (a) problems with conceptualizations of stress, (b) variability in measurement of stressors, and (c) lack of theory-driven research. To address these problems, the authors propose a general conceptual model of the relation between stressors and child and adolescent psychopathology. The authors examine basic tenets of this general model in the second half of this article by testing a specific model in which negative parenting mediates the relation between economic stressors and psychological symptoms in young people. Results generally provide support for the specific model as well as for the broader model.
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              A structural modeling approach to the understanding of parenting stress.

              Tested and cross-validated a multidimensional model of predictors of parenting stress on data from a population-based sample of Swedish mothers (N = 1,081) with children ages 6 months to 3 years. The study was a cross-sectional questionnaire study, focusing on the explanation of variance in parenting stress. Structural equation modeling procedures permitted disentanglement of total, direct, and indirect effects. A Swedish instrument based on parts of the Parent Domain in the Parenting Stress Index was used as a measure of stress. The results provided general support for the proposed model. High workload, low social support, perception of the child as fussy-difficult, negative life events, child caretaking hassles, more children in the family, and high maternal age related directly to more stress. Child irregularity contributed indirectly to mother's experienced stress. No buffering effects of social support were found. Forty-eight percent of the variance in the parenting stress measure was explained by the model. Implications for interventions were discussed.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Journal of Psychopathology and Behavioral Assessment
                J Psychopathol Behav Assess
                Springer Nature
                0882-2689
                1573-3505
                June 2006
                June 2006
                : 28
                : 2
                : 113-122
                Article
                10.1007/s10862-006-7489-3
                ded03493-a059-4b4d-baab-0b421f165034
                © 2006
                History

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