The specificity of maternal parenting behavior and child adjustment difficulties: a study of inner-city African American families.

Journal: Journal Of Family Psychology : JFP : Journal Of The Division Of Family Psychology Of The American Psychological Association (Division 43)
Published:
Abstract

The specificity of the association between 2 parenting behaviors (warmth and supervision) and 2 indicators, aggressive behavior and depressive symptoms, of major child outcomes (externalizing problems and internalizing problems) was examined among 196 inner-city African American mothers and their school age children. Given the growing number of African American families affected by HIV/AIDS and demonstrated compromises in parenting associated with maternal infection, the moderating role of maternal HIV/AIDS was also examined. Findings from longitudinal analyses supported the specificity of maternal warmth but not of maternal supervision. Maternal warmth was a stronger predictor of decreases in child aggressive behavior than of decreases in depressive symptoms. In addition, maternal warmth was a stronger predictor of decreases in aggressive behavior than was maternal supervision. Parenting specificity was not moderated by maternal HIV/AIDS. Clinical implications and future research directions are discussed.

Authors
Deborah Jones, Rex Forehand, Aaron Rakow, Christina J Colletti, Laura Mckee, Alecia Zalot
Relevant Conditions

HIV/AIDS