AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examines the mutual influence between parenting stress and children's coping skills using data from 610 parents in a specific program.
  • Results reveal that high parenting stress can lead to poorer coping abilities in preschoolers, while better child coping can reduce parenting stress over time.
  • The impact of child coping on parenting stress was consistent across different ethnicities, but the reverse relationship varied, being significant for African American families but not for European American families, prompting discussions on intervention strategies.

Article Abstract

The present study was designed to evaluate the bidirectional relationships between parenting stress and child coping competence. Data from a diverse sample of 610 parents enrolled in the parenting our children to excellence program was used to evaluate whether parenting stress negatively contributes to affective, achievement, and social coping competence in preschoolers, as well as whether child coping competence predicts parenting stress; after accounting for child disruptive behavior. Results from cross-lagged panel analyses demonstrated a bidirectional relationship, such that parenting stress predicted later child coping competence and child coping competence predicted later parenting stress. Assessment of ethnicity differences indicated that child coping continues to have a long-term impact on parenting stress, regardless of parent ethnicity. The same relationship did not hold for earlier parenting stress on later child coping competence, however, indicating a bidirectional relationship for African American families, but not for their European American counterparts. The relationship between parenting stress and child coping competence is discussed with respect to their conceptual and clinical implications. Suggestions for parent training intervention and prevention programs are given.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6639041PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10826-010-9397-0DOI Listing

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