학술논문

Sensitive and Harsh Parenting of Infants: Associations with Maternal Depression, Generalized Anxiety, and Empathic Concern.
Document Type
Article
Source
Journal of Child & Family Studies. Dec2021, Vol. 30 Issue 12, p2925-2937. 13p. 1 Diagram, 4 Charts.
Subject
*DEPRESSION in women
*PARENTING
*PARENT-child relationships
*WELL-being
*EMPATHY
*PSYCHOLOGY of mothers
*HOME care services
*QUALITY of life
Language
ISSN
1062-1024
Abstract
Many studies have identified associations between maternal depression and decreased quality of parenting. In addition to maternal depression, we examined associations of maternal generalized anxiety and empathy with quality of parenting. Mothers (N = 133) participating in a statewide home visiting implementation study completed baseline and follow-up interviews during which information on demographic and psychosocial characteristics were collected. As part of follow-up data collection, mothers were videotaped for fifteen minutes while playing with their infants, aged 4–13 months, using standardized toys. The videos were coded using qualitative rating scales. Multivariate linear regression was used to assess associations of maternal psychosocial well-being: depression, generalized anxiety, and empathy with two parenting outcomes: sensitive and harsh parenting. Depression and anxiety were negatively associated with sensitive parenting. Empathy was negatively associated with harsh parenting. At follow-up, mothers who screened positive for depression or anxiety exhibited less sensitive parenting than those who screened negative for both conditions. Mothers who screened positive for depression or anxiety at baseline but screened negative at follow-up, had similar sensitive parenting scores to mothers who screened negative at both time points. These findings demonstrate the potential benefits of responding effectively to maternal depression and anxiety and the need for programs to identify and respond to maternal depression and anxiety on a continuing basis, not just at enrollment. Highlights: Maternal anxiety and depression were associated with less sensitive parenting of infants. Maternal empathy was associated with less harsh parenting of infants. Mothers with resolved anxiety or depression parented with similar sensitivity as those never screening positive. Providers should screen perinatal women for depression and anxiety regularly and respond to these conditions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]