{"title":"美国不同人群的关系质量、育儿实践和青少年心理健康。","authors":"Jonathan Rothwell, Telli Davoodi","doi":"10.1037/fam0001303","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><p>Various parenting practices and behaviors have been consistently linked to children and youth's mental health outcomes (Pinquart, 2016, 2017) through identified psychological and biological mechanisms (Hoeve et al., 2009). The quality of the dyadic parent-child relationship is less commonly studied but may be important in mediating the efficacy of parenting practices and understanding cultural differences in how parenting practices affect development outcomes (Ho et al., 2008; Lansford, 2022). To explore these issues, we fielded a questionnaire through a probability-based sample provided by Gallup, collecting data from 6,643 U.S. parents and 1,580 teenagers. In a series of separate exploratory factor analyses, we identified racial/ethnic group-specific constructs of parenting practices and relationship quality. Using the group-specific factor structures for parenting practices and parent-child relationship quality, we find a large effect of perceived parent-child relationship quality on adolescent mental health. In combination with adverse childhood experiences and parenting practices, parent-child relationship quality explains at least 34% of the variation in adolescent mental health in each group; the association is just as strong for nonbiological parent-child dyads as for biological and falls only slightly after adjusting for evocative effects. We replicate the finding that effective parenting practices-summarized by responsiveness and demandingness-predict better mental health, but importantly, we find that most of the effect is indirect through better perceived relationship quality. Our findings inform future research exploring more complex causal pathways between parenting and youth development in different cultural contexts and inform the work of clinicians and service providers working with diverse groups of families. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2025 APA, all rights reserved).</p>","PeriodicalId":48381,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Family Psychology","volume":" ","pages":"218-228"},"PeriodicalIF":2.3000,"publicationDate":"2025-03-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Relationship quality, parenting practices, and adolescent mental health across diverse U.S. populations.\",\"authors\":\"Jonathan Rothwell, Telli Davoodi\",\"doi\":\"10.1037/fam0001303\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p><p>Various parenting practices and behaviors have been consistently linked to children and youth's mental health outcomes (Pinquart, 2016, 2017) through identified psychological and biological mechanisms (Hoeve et al., 2009). The quality of the dyadic parent-child relationship is less commonly studied but may be important in mediating the efficacy of parenting practices and understanding cultural differences in how parenting practices affect development outcomes (Ho et al., 2008; Lansford, 2022). To explore these issues, we fielded a questionnaire through a probability-based sample provided by Gallup, collecting data from 6,643 U.S. parents and 1,580 teenagers. In a series of separate exploratory factor analyses, we identified racial/ethnic group-specific constructs of parenting practices and relationship quality. Using the group-specific factor structures for parenting practices and parent-child relationship quality, we find a large effect of perceived parent-child relationship quality on adolescent mental health. In combination with adverse childhood experiences and parenting practices, parent-child relationship quality explains at least 34% of the variation in adolescent mental health in each group; the association is just as strong for nonbiological parent-child dyads as for biological and falls only slightly after adjusting for evocative effects. We replicate the finding that effective parenting practices-summarized by responsiveness and demandingness-predict better mental health, but importantly, we find that most of the effect is indirect through better perceived relationship quality. Our findings inform future research exploring more complex causal pathways between parenting and youth development in different cultural contexts and inform the work of clinicians and service providers working with diverse groups of families. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
通过确定的心理和生物学机制(Hoeve et al., 2009),各种育儿实践和行为一直与儿童和青少年的心理健康结果有关(Pinquart, 2016, 2017)。双元亲子关系的质量较少被研究,但可能在调节养育实践的效果和理解养育实践如何影响发展结果的文化差异方面很重要(Ho et al., 2008;Lansford, 2022)。为了探讨这些问题,我们通过盖洛普提供的基于概率的样本进行了问卷调查,收集了6643名美国父母和1580名青少年的数据。在一系列单独的探索性因素分析中,我们确定了种族/民族群体特定的育儿实践和关系质量结构。运用亲子关系质量的群体特定因素结构,我们发现感知亲子关系质量对青少年心理健康有很大的影响。结合不良的童年经历和养育做法,亲子关系质量至少可以解释每一组青少年心理健康差异的34%;这种关联在非生物学的亲子二联体和生物学的亲子二联体中同样强烈,在调整了唤起效应后,这种关联仅略有下降。我们重复了这一发现,即有效的养育实践——通过反应性和要求性来总结——预示着更好的心理健康,但重要的是,我们发现大部分的影响是通过更好的感知关系质量间接产生的。我们的发现为未来探索不同文化背景下父母教养和青少年发展之间更复杂的因果关系的研究提供了信息,并为临床医生和服务提供者与不同家庭群体的工作提供了信息。(PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2025 APA,版权所有)。
Relationship quality, parenting practices, and adolescent mental health across diverse U.S. populations.
Various parenting practices and behaviors have been consistently linked to children and youth's mental health outcomes (Pinquart, 2016, 2017) through identified psychological and biological mechanisms (Hoeve et al., 2009). The quality of the dyadic parent-child relationship is less commonly studied but may be important in mediating the efficacy of parenting practices and understanding cultural differences in how parenting practices affect development outcomes (Ho et al., 2008; Lansford, 2022). To explore these issues, we fielded a questionnaire through a probability-based sample provided by Gallup, collecting data from 6,643 U.S. parents and 1,580 teenagers. In a series of separate exploratory factor analyses, we identified racial/ethnic group-specific constructs of parenting practices and relationship quality. Using the group-specific factor structures for parenting practices and parent-child relationship quality, we find a large effect of perceived parent-child relationship quality on adolescent mental health. In combination with adverse childhood experiences and parenting practices, parent-child relationship quality explains at least 34% of the variation in adolescent mental health in each group; the association is just as strong for nonbiological parent-child dyads as for biological and falls only slightly after adjusting for evocative effects. We replicate the finding that effective parenting practices-summarized by responsiveness and demandingness-predict better mental health, but importantly, we find that most of the effect is indirect through better perceived relationship quality. Our findings inform future research exploring more complex causal pathways between parenting and youth development in different cultural contexts and inform the work of clinicians and service providers working with diverse groups of families. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2025 APA, all rights reserved).
期刊介绍:
Journal of Family Psychology offers cutting-edge, groundbreaking, state-of-the-art, and innovative empirical research with real-world applicability in the field of family psychology. This premiere family research journal is devoted to the study of the family system, broadly defined, from multiple perspectives and to the application of psychological methods to advance knowledge related to family research, patterns and processes, and assessment and intervention, as well as to policies relevant to advancing the quality of life for families.