AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examines the impact of parenting on youth health outcomes, particularly focusing on adolescents living with HIV transitioning from pediatric to adult care in Rwanda.
  • It evaluated the Children's Report of Parenting Behavior Inventory (CRPBI) for both youth and caregivers, finding a two-dimensional factor structure: acceptance/positive involvement and hostile detachment/rejection.
  • While the CRPBI was reliable and valid for youth responses, it was less effective for caregivers, indicating the need for careful adaptation of parenting assessment tools in different cultural contexts.

Article Abstract

Parenting has been implicated in a range of youth health outcomes. Positive parenting during adolescence, a critical period of developmental change, may equip youth with the necessary tools for their transition into adulthood and, for youth living with HIV, their transition from pediatric HIV care into adult HIV care. Yet, because few studies have carefully assessed the psychometric properties of parenting instruments applied cross-culturally, the validity of parenting research derived in these contexts remains unclear. This study tested the factor structure of the Children's Report of Parenting Behavior Inventory (CRPBI) in a novel setting (e.g., Rwanda), context (e.g., youth with HIV), and considering multiple informants (caregivers and youth). Youth ( = 330) were on average 16.78 years of age; 51% self-identified as female. Caregivers ( = 330) were on average 44.40 years of age; 80% self-identified as female. The factor structures for youth and caregiver CRPBIs appeared to be indicative of two dimensions: (a) acceptance and positive involvement, and (b) hostile detachment and rejection. The CRPBI worked well for youth reports and showed predictive validity. The CRPBI worked less well for caregivers, necessitating the removal of 10 items, seven of which were related to hostile detachment and rejection. The reliability of both CRPBIs was supported. The CRPBI appears to function well for youth, but not as well for caregivers, in this novel context with this unique population of youth with HIV. The findings support careful assessment of instruments developed in high-resource settings and then used in resource-constrained contexts. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/fam0001195DOI Listing

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