AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study investigates how responsive parenting influences the relationship between children's exposure to intimate partner violence (IPV) and their mental health, particularly posttraumatic stress symptoms (PTSS).
  • - Researchers consider two approaches: mediation (where IPV affects responsive parenting, which then impacts children) and moderation (where responsive parenting can either worsen or lessen the negative effects of IPV on children).
  • - Findings reveal that responsive parenting acts both as a mediator and moderator in this relationship, highlighting the need for further research to understand its role in children's mental health following IPV exposure.

Article Abstract

Responsive parenting serves an influential role in explaining the link between children's exposure to intimate partner violence (IPV) and children's mental health impairment, but how this occurs is not well elucidated. In some cases, researchers examine parenting as a mediator to explain how IPV leads to maladaptive outcomes (i.e., IPV negatively impacts one's capacity for responsive parenting, which in turn impacts children), whereas others examine moderation in which either the absence of responsive parenting exacerbates adverse outcomes or increased responsive parenting buffers risk. Mediation addresses theoretical questions about or IPV leads to maladaptive outcomes, whereas moderation addresses might be most impacted. However, responsive parenting has rarely, if ever, been tested as both a mediator and moderator of the link between IPV and posttraumatic stress symptoms (PTSS) within the same sample. The current study examined the mediating and moderating role of responsive parenting on physical IPV exposure and child PTSS in a longitudinal sample of 391 children ages 3 to 5 years ( = 4.74,  = 0.89). Self-report measures of physical IPV exposure, parenting practices, and PTSS were completed by mothers. We found that responsive parenting significantly moderated and mediated the association between physical IPV exposure and child PTSS over time. Studies that include tests of both moderation and mediation are critical for advancing mechanistic insight into the role of parenting in the etiology of mental health impairment in children exposed to IPV.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11199459PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s40653-023-00593-3DOI Listing

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