Fertility Problems and Parenting Daily Hassles in Childhood: A 7-year Longitudinal Study of Adoptive Parents.

IF 0.9 Q3 SOCIAL WORK
Jing Wang, Misaki N Natsuaki, Jenae M Neiderhiser, Daniel S Shaw, Jody Ganiban, David Reiss, Leslie D Leve
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引用次数: 4

Abstract

Fertility problems are known to exert a negative impact on psychological health. Meanwhile, individuals with fertility challenges often view adoption as a positive healing experience. Yet, a dearth of work has examined the long-term impact that fertility problems have on adoptive parents and their childrearing stress. Here, we investigated how fertility problems related to parenting daily hassle (PDH) trajectories among adoptive mothers and fathers in the Early Growth and Development Study (N = 333). When adopted children were 9 months old, adoptive parents reported whether they had fertility problems prior to their decision to adopt and rated their PDH frequency and intensity on six occasions over the next 7 years. Multilevel models revealed inverse U-shaped curves for PDH among both fertile and infertile parents, such that PDH increased from child age 9 months until about 5 to 6 years and decreased thereafter. Mothers with fertility problems exhibited a steeper PDH incline from 9 months to the peak at child age 5 to 6, but also incurred a swifter subsequent decline. There were no significant differences in fathers' PDH trajectories based on fertility problems. We discuss why fertility problems appear to impact PDH trajectories for mothers rather than fathers.

儿童时期生育问题与父母日常争吵:对养父母7年的纵向研究。
众所周知,生育问题会对心理健康产生负面影响。与此同时,生育能力有问题的人往往将收养视为一种积极的治愈经历。然而,关于生育问题对养父母及其子女抚养压力的长期影响的研究缺乏。在这里,我们调查了在早期生长和发展研究(N = 333)中养父母的生育问题如何与养育日常麻烦(PDH)轨迹相关。当被收养的孩子9个月大时,养父母报告他们在决定收养之前是否有生育问题,并在接下来的7年里六次评估他们的PDH频率和强度。多水平模型显示,可育父母和不育父母的PDH均呈反u型曲线,PDH在儿童9个月至5 - 6岁期间升高,此后下降。有生育问题的母亲在9个月大的时候PDH急剧上升,在孩子5 - 6岁时达到峰值,但随后的下降速度也更快。在生育问题的基础上,父亲的PDH轨迹没有显著差异。我们讨论了为什么生育问题似乎会影响母亲而不是父亲的PDH轨迹。
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来源期刊
Adoption Quarterly
Adoption Quarterly SOCIAL WORK-
CiteScore
1.60
自引率
12.50%
发文量
3
期刊介绍: Adoption Quarterly is an unparalleled forum for examining the issues of child care, of adoption as viewed from a lifespan perspective, and of the psychological and social meanings of the word "family." This international, multidisciplinary journal features conceptual and empirical work, commentaries, and book reviews from the fields of the social sciences, humanities, biological sciences, law, and social policy. In addition to examining ethical, biological, financial, social and psychological adoption issues, Adoption Quarterly addresses continuity in adoption issues that are important to both practitioners and researchers, such as: negotiation of birth and adoptive family contact.
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