Literature DB >> 12108767

Interparental conflict and risk behaviors among Mexican American adolescents: a cognitive-emotional model.

Jeanne M Tschann1, Elena Flores, Barbara VanOss Marin, Lauri A Pasch, E Marco Baisch, Charles J Wibbelsman.   

Abstract

This study used a cognitive-emotional model to examine the relations between multiple dimensions of interparental conflict and health risk behaviors among young adolescents. Participants were 151 Mexican American adolescents and their parents. At initial individual interviews, parents reported on conflict with their spouses, and adolescents reported on their parents' conflict, their appraisals of the conflict, their emotional distress, and their acculturation level. At 6-month follow-ups, adolescents reported on their risk behaviors, including substance use and sexual activity. In general, adolescents' acculturation level was not related to their risk behaviors. More frequent conflict, more conflict about the adolescent, more adolescent involvement in the conflict, and poor conflict resolution were related to greater emotional distress. More conflict about the adolescent, mothers being more demanding/dominating during conflict, and more adolescent involvement in the conflict were related to greater risk behaviors. Adolescents' cognitions mediated the link between two dimensions of parental conflict, frequency and resolution, and emotional distress. Adolescents' emotional distress mediated the association between adolescent involvement in parental conflict and adolescents' risk behaviors.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2002        PMID: 12108767     DOI: 10.1023/a:1015718008205

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Abnorm Child Psychol        ISSN: 0091-0627


  28 in total

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5.  Spanish Language Use Across Generations and Depressive Symptoms Among US Latinos.

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6.  Immigrant Generation and Sexual Initiation Among a Diverse Racial/Ethnic Group of Urban Youth.

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7.  Unpacking acculturation: cultural orientations and educational attainment among Mexican-origin youth.

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8.  Threat is a multidimensional construct: exploring the role of children's threat appraisals in the relationship between interparental conflict and child adjustment.

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9.  Family obligation values and family assistance behaviors: protective and risk factors for Mexican-American adolescents' substance use.

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10.  The impact of acculturative stress and daily hassles on pre-adolescent psychological adjustment: examining anxiety symptoms.

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