Parental Monitoring, Parental Knowledge, and the Occurrence of Potentially Traumatic Events in Adolescence.

IF 2.9 2区 心理学 Q1 PSYCHOLOGY, CLINICAL
Isabel R Aks, Herry Patel, Isabella S Davis, Emily M Schulze, William E Pelham
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Abstract

Parental monitoring and knowledge of their teens' activities might enable parents to keep teens safe, reducing the risk of potentially traumatic events. This paper investigated that possibility using a large, nationwide sample of 11,880 early adolescent teens followed longitudinally from ages 10-11 to 13-14 years old. At annual assessments, teens completed measures of parental monitoring/knowledge and of potentially traumatic events. Data were analyzed using multilevel models to separate between- and within-family associations. Because within-family associations cannot be explained by the many systematic differences between families with low vs. high monitoring, they comprise more rigorous evidence of a potential causal relationship. We tested both concurrent associations between monitoring/knowledge and PTEs and prospective associations over 12 months. At the between-family level, every tested association was significant (p < .001): greater monitoring and/or knowledge predicted fewer PTEs. However, at the within-family level, few associations were significant. Greater knowledge (p = 0.005) or combined monitoring/knowledge (p = 0.01) predicted fewer PTEs concurrently, but greater monitoring alone did not (p = 0.14). No prospective within-family associations were statistically significant. We replicated this pattern of findings in a different set of observations from the same sample, using different measures of each construct. We conclude that most of the apparent association between parental monitoring/knowledge and PTEs is explained by confounding factors, rather than a causal relationship. However, we found some evidence supporting a causal link in models of concurrent associations, suggesting any causal relationship between monitoring/knowledge and PTEs may unfold over shorter timescales.

父母的监督、父母的知识和青春期潜在创伤事件的发生。
父母对青少年活动的监督和了解可能会让父母保护青少年的安全,降低潜在创伤事件的风险。本文通过对全国范围内 11,880 名青春期早期青少年的大规模抽样调查,对他们从 10-11 岁到 13-14 岁的成长过程进行了纵向跟踪,从而研究了这种可能性。在年度评估中,青少年完成了对父母监督/知识和潜在创伤事件的测量。我们使用多层次模型对数据进行了分析,以区分家庭之间和家庭内部的关联。由于家庭内部关联无法用低监控和高监控家庭之间的许多系统性差异来解释,因此它们是潜在因果关系的更严格证据。我们测试了监控/知识与 PTE 之间的同期关联以及 12 个月内的前瞻性关联。在家庭间水平上,每个测试的关联性都是显著的(p
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来源期刊
Research on Child and Adolescent Psychopathology
Research on Child and Adolescent Psychopathology Psychology-Developmental and Educational Psychology
CiteScore
5.00
自引率
4.00%
发文量
107
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