Literature DB >> 10756517

Children's health and child-parent relationships as predictors of problem-drinking mothers' and fathers' long-term adaptation.

C Timko1, M S Kaplowitz, R H Moos.   

Abstract

This study examined the extent to which children's health status and child-parent relationships affected the severity of problem-drinking parents' alcohol use disorders, as well as the parents' psychological states and marital stressors and resources. These issues were examined using data from an 8-year study of problem-drinking women and men. Generally, over the 8-year period, the children of alcoholic mothers and fathers were comparable on their health status and relationships with their parents. The severity of mothers' and fathers' drinking problems were also generally comparable over this period. Better children's health and child-parent relationships at baseline and 1- and 3-year follow-ups were consistent predictors of mothers' reduced drinking and better psychological states on the subsequent follow-ups. Associations between children's functioning and fathers' adaptation were few and inconsistent. The results support the possibility that an undesirable cycle might be established in which maternal drinking and children's dysfunction coexist in an ever worsening reciprocal relationship.

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Mesh:

Year:  2000        PMID: 10756517     DOI: 10.1016/s0899-3289(99)00023-1

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Subst Abuse        ISSN: 0899-3289


  2 in total

1.  Changes in women's alcoholic, antisocial, and depressive symptomatology over 12 years: a multilevel network of individual, familial, and neighborhood influences.

Authors:  Anne Buu; Wei Wang; Jing Wang; Leon I Puttler; Hiram E Fitzgerald; Robert A Zucker
Journal:  Dev Psychopathol       Date:  2011-02

2.  Paternal alcohol abuse: relationship between child adjustment, parental characteristics, and family functioning.

Authors:  Bente Storm Mowatt Haugland
Journal:  Child Psychiatry Hum Dev       Date:  2003
  2 in total

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