Transitions on and off AFDC: implications for parenting and children's cognitive development.

Child Dev

Graduate School of Social Services, Fordham University, New York, NY 10023, USA.

Published: February 2002

AI Article Synopsis

  • The text examines the impact of welfare reform on mothers and their young children, focusing on how welfare receipt affects maternal emotional distress, parenting behavior, and child cognitive outcomes.
  • It uses data from the Infant Health and Development Program, studying 833 families to determine the associations between welfare receipt timing, family poverty status, and child development by age 3.
  • Findings reveal that welfare dependence negatively influences parenting and child outcomes, with varying effects based on when assistance was received and whether the family remained in poverty upon leaving welfare.

Article Abstract

The goal of current national and state legislation on welfare reform is to decrease the number of people who are dependent on public assistance, most of whom are mothers and their young children. Mothers' patterns of welfare receipt in the 3 years following the birth of a child were examined vis-à-vis their associations with maternal emotional distress (General Health Questionnaire), provision of learning experiences (Home Observation of the Measurement of the Environment), parenting behavior, and the child's cognitive test score (Stanford-Binet) in the third year of life. The data set was the Infant Health and Development Program, an eight-site randomized clinical trial designed to test the efficacy of educational and family support services in reducing developmental delays in low-birthweight, preterm infants (N = 833). Strong negative associations were found between receiving welfare and parenting behavior and child outcomes at age 3 years. Outcomes varied depending on when the mother received public assistance (earlier or later in her child's first 3 years) and family poverty status on leaving welfare. The parenting behavior of mothers who had left welfare by their child's third birthday was more likely to be authoritarian if she had left public assistance without also leaving poverty. Implications of these findings for the well-being of children in low-income families are discussed.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1467-8624.00363DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

public assistance
12
parenting behavior
12
welfare parenting
8
welfare
5
transitions afdc
4
afdc implications
4
parenting
4
implications parenting
4
parenting children's
4
children's cognitive
4

Similar Publications

A survey study of physical activity participation in different organisational forms among groups of immigrants and descendants in Denmark.

BMC Public Health

January 2025

Centre for Sports, Health, and Civil Society, Research Unit for Active Living, Department of Sports Science and Clinical Biomechanics, University of Southern Denmark, Odense, Denmark.

Background: Several studies have found that immigrants and descendants are less physically active than the majority population, particularly within sports clubs. However, most studies do not provide breakdowns by specific ethnic groups or organisational forms. Therefore, our paper analyses the influence of ethnicity, immigrant status, and sociodemographic and -economic characteristics on the physical activity participation of immigrants and descendants in sports clubs, commercial centres and self-organised activities in Denmark.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: The 340B Drug Pricing Program has been controversial since its inception in 1992, a major criticism being that 340B hospitals use more outpatient drugs, and more expensive drugs, because of financial incentives to "make money" through the program. The goal of this study was to determine whether characteristics of patients treated at 340B hospitals, and affiliation of hospitals with NCI-designated cancer centers, would explain higher Part B drug costs and use of more expensive chemotherapy drugs.

Methods: This is an observational study using data from SEER-Medicare and 340B entity database.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: To investigate the associations between five depressive symptom trajectories and cognitive impairment in Taiwan's older population. In addition, we investigated the moderating factors influencing these associations.

Methods: This population-based, longitudinal, cohort study was conducted on the basis of the Taiwan Longitudinal Study on Aging.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Penalized landmark supermodels (penLM) for dynamic prediction for time-to-event outcomes in high-dimensional data.

BMC Med Res Methodol

January 2025

Quantitative Sciences Unit, Department of Medicine, Stanford University School of Medicine, 3180 Porter Drive, Office 118, Stanford, CA, 94304, USA.

Background: To effectively monitor long-term outcomes among cancer patients, it is critical to accurately assess patients' dynamic prognosis, which often involves utilizing multiple data sources (e.g., tumor registries, treatment histories, and patient-reported outcomes).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: China has made strides to achieve universal pension coverage through implementing the Public Pension Scheme for Urban and Rural Residents (PPSURR) program since 2014. This study explores the effectiveness of implementing the PPSURR in an impoverished county in China and investigates the determinants of residents' choice on the contribution level of the PPSURR.

Methodology: Binary logit regression models were conducted using datasets extracted from the Chinese General Social Survey in 2021 and datasets collected through surveying 321 residents in Donglan county, China.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!