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When Parents Are at Fault: Development and Validation of the Parental Guilt and Shame Proneness Scale. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Research explores the connection between guilt and shame in caregivers and its effects on their mental health and parenting practices, highlighting a gap in validated measurement tools for these emotions.
  • A new scale, the Parental Guilt and Shame Proneness scale (PGASP), was developed through studies with Chinese parents, featuring subscales that differentiate types of guilt and shame.
  • Results demonstrated that guilt is linked to positive parenting and mental health, while the shame-withdraw subscale is associated with negative outcomes, emphasizing the importance of distinguishing between different types of shame in parenting contexts.

Article Abstract

Research has linked individuals' dispositional guilt and shame to their interpersonal processes. Although caregivers' guilt and shame proneness in the parenting context likely have important implications for their mental health and parenting, there is a lack of validated measures for such dispositions. In three studies with Chinese parents, we developed and validated the Parental Guilt and Shame Proneness scale (PGASP), which was based on the Guilt and Shame Proneness scale (GASP). The PGASP comprises two guilt subscales-negative behavior-evaluations (guilt-NBE) and repair action tendencies (guilt-repair)-and two shame subscales-negative self-evaluations (shame-NSE) and withdrawal action tendencies (shame-withdraw). Study 1 ( = 604) provided support for the four-factor structure of the PGASP, which was replicated in Study 2 ( = 451). The concurrent validity of the PGASP was examined in Study 2 and Study 3 ( = 455). The two guilt subscales were associated with better mental health and more positive parenting, whereas parents' shame-withdraw exhibited the opposite pattern; weak or no relations were found for shame-NSE. Findings highlight the need to differentiate between parents' shame-NSE and shame-withdraw. PGASP may be a useful tool for identifying parents at risk of engaging in negative parenting.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00223891.2024.2311208DOI Listing

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