{"title":"儿童行为问题与父母适应:家庭、父母间和亲子过程同时起中介作用。","authors":"Xiaomin Li, Chun Bun Lam, Kevin Kien Hoa Chung","doi":"10.1037/ort0000757","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"This study examined the associations of child behavioral problems with parental adjustment and whether family processes mediated such associations. Cross-sectional data were collected from the fathers, mothers, and class teachers of 186 kindergarten-aged children with special educational needs from Hong Kong, China (mean age = 61.6 months, and 136 of them were boys). Using questionnaires, parents reported their children's behavioral problems and their own adjustment and family processes. Meanwhile, class teachers rated children's behavioral problems. Multigroup analyses supported a mediation model that was invariant across fathers and mothers. Controlling for child and family demographic information, child behavioral problems were linked positively to parental depression and negatively to parental life satisfaction. Moreover, the link of child behavioral problems with parental depression was fully mediated by family economic pressures, marital conflict, and parent-child conflict, whereas the link of child behavioral problems with parental life satisfaction was fully mediated by family economic pressures and marital conflict. Theoretically, our findings pointed to the importance of considering multiple family processes in understanding the relationship between child characteristics and parental well-being among families with children with special educational needs. Practically, our findings highlighted the possible utility of equipping fathers and mothers of children with special educational needs with skills to reduce children's problem behaviors, cope with financial hardship, and manage marital and parent-child conflict. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).","PeriodicalId":409666,"journal":{"name":"The American journal of orthopsychiatry","volume":"55 20","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2024-04-25","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Child behavioral problems and parental adjustment: Family, interparental, and parent-child processes as simultaneous mediators.\",\"authors\":\"Xiaomin Li, Chun Bun Lam, Kevin Kien Hoa Chung\",\"doi\":\"10.1037/ort0000757\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"This study examined the associations of child behavioral problems with parental adjustment and whether family processes mediated such associations. Cross-sectional data were collected from the fathers, mothers, and class teachers of 186 kindergarten-aged children with special educational needs from Hong Kong, China (mean age = 61.6 months, and 136 of them were boys). Using questionnaires, parents reported their children's behavioral problems and their own adjustment and family processes. Meanwhile, class teachers rated children's behavioral problems. Multigroup analyses supported a mediation model that was invariant across fathers and mothers. Controlling for child and family demographic information, child behavioral problems were linked positively to parental depression and negatively to parental life satisfaction. Moreover, the link of child behavioral problems with parental depression was fully mediated by family economic pressures, marital conflict, and parent-child conflict, whereas the link of child behavioral problems with parental life satisfaction was fully mediated by family economic pressures and marital conflict. Theoretically, our findings pointed to the importance of considering multiple family processes in understanding the relationship between child characteristics and parental well-being among families with children with special educational needs. Practically, our findings highlighted the possible utility of equipping fathers and mothers of children with special educational needs with skills to reduce children's problem behaviors, cope with financial hardship, and manage marital and parent-child conflict. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
本研究探讨了儿童行为问题与父母适应之间的关联,以及家庭过程是否对这种关联起到了中介作用。研究收集了中国香港186名有特殊教育需要的幼儿园学龄儿童(平均年龄为61.6个月,其中136名为男孩)的父亲、母亲和班主任的横断面数据。通过问卷调查,家长们报告了孩子的行为问题以及他们自身的适应情况和家庭进程。同时,班主任也对孩子的行为问题进行了评分。多组分析支持了一个在父亲和母亲之间不变的中介模型。在控制了儿童和家庭人口信息后,儿童行为问题与父母抑郁呈正相关,与父母生活满意度呈负相关。此外,儿童行为问题与父母抑郁之间的联系完全受家庭经济压力、婚姻冲突和亲子冲突的影响,而儿童行为问题与父母生活满意度之间的联系则完全受家庭经济压力和婚姻冲突的影响。从理论上讲,我们的研究结果表明,在理解有特殊教育需求儿童的家庭中儿童特征与父母幸福之间的关系时,考虑多重家庭过程非常重要。在实践中,我们的研究结果强调了让有特殊教育需求儿童的父亲和母亲掌握减少儿童问题行为、应对经济困难以及处理婚姻和亲子冲突的技能的可能效用。(PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved)。
Child behavioral problems and parental adjustment: Family, interparental, and parent-child processes as simultaneous mediators.
This study examined the associations of child behavioral problems with parental adjustment and whether family processes mediated such associations. Cross-sectional data were collected from the fathers, mothers, and class teachers of 186 kindergarten-aged children with special educational needs from Hong Kong, China (mean age = 61.6 months, and 136 of them were boys). Using questionnaires, parents reported their children's behavioral problems and their own adjustment and family processes. Meanwhile, class teachers rated children's behavioral problems. Multigroup analyses supported a mediation model that was invariant across fathers and mothers. Controlling for child and family demographic information, child behavioral problems were linked positively to parental depression and negatively to parental life satisfaction. Moreover, the link of child behavioral problems with parental depression was fully mediated by family economic pressures, marital conflict, and parent-child conflict, whereas the link of child behavioral problems with parental life satisfaction was fully mediated by family economic pressures and marital conflict. Theoretically, our findings pointed to the importance of considering multiple family processes in understanding the relationship between child characteristics and parental well-being among families with children with special educational needs. Practically, our findings highlighted the possible utility of equipping fathers and mothers of children with special educational needs with skills to reduce children's problem behaviors, cope with financial hardship, and manage marital and parent-child conflict. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).