Parent–adolescent relationship quality as a moderator of links between COVID-19 disruption and reported changes in mothers’ and young adults’ adjustment in five countries
Autor: | Jennifer Godwin, Jennifer E. Lansford, Emma Sorbring, Kenneth A. Dodge, Saengduean Yotanyamaneewong, Sevtap Gurdal, Marc H. Bornstein, Laura Di Giunta, Sombat Tapanya, Kirby Deater-Deckard, Dario Bacchini, Ann T. Skinner, Liane Peña Alampay, Laurence Steinberg, Concetta Pastorelli |
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Přispěvatelé: | Skinner, A. T., Godwin, J., Alampay, L. P., Lansford, J. E., Bacchini, D., Bornstein, M. H., Deater-Deckard, K., di Giunta, L., Dodge, K. A., Gurdal, S., Pastorelli, C., Sorbring, E., Steinberg, L., Tapanya, S., Yotanyamaneewong, S. |
Rok vydání: | 2021 |
Předmět: |
United State
Parents Externalization Adolescent media_common.quotation_subject Mothers Article Developmental psychology Young Adult Social support adjustment adolescence COVID-19 parenting Family Health Female Humans Pandemics Parenting SARS-CoV-2 United States Resilience Psychological Pandemic Developmental and Educational Psychology Young adult Life-span and Life-course Studies Demography media_common Mother Resilience Moderation Mental health Parent Psychological Family resilience Psychological resilience Psychology Human |
Zdroj: | Dev Psychol |
ISSN: | 1939-0599 0012-1649 |
DOI: | 10.1037/dev0001236 |
Popis: | The COVID-19 pandemic has presented families around the world with extraordinary challenges related to physical and mental health, economic security, social support, and education. The current study capitalizes on a longitudinal, cross-national study of parenting, adolescent development, and young adult competence to document the association between personal disruption during the pandemic and reported changes in internalizing and externalizing behavior in young adults and their mothers since the pandemic began. It further investigates whether family functioning during adolescence 3 years earlier moderates this association. Data from 484 families in five countries (Italy, the Philippines, Sweden, Thailand, and the United States) reveal that higher levels of reported disruption during the pandemic are related to reported increases in internalizing and externalizing behaviors after the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic for young adults (Mage = 20) and their mothers in all five countries, with the exception of one association in Thailand. Associations between disruption during the pandemic and young adults' and their mothers' reported increases in internalizing and externalizing behaviors were attenuated by higher levels of youth disclosure, more supportive parenting, and lower levels of destructive adolescent-parent conflict prior to the pandemic. This work has implications for fostering parent-child relationships characterized by warmth, acceptance, trust, open communication, and constructive conflict resolution at all times given their protective effects for family resilience during times of crisis. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved). |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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