| Literature DB >> 26019717 |
Abstract
Health disparities are rooted in childhood and stem from adverse early environments that damage physiologic stress-response systems. Developmental psychobiological models of the effects of chronic stress account for both the negative effects of a stress-response system calibrated to a dangerous and unpredictable environment from a health perspective, and the positive effects of such an adaptively calibrated stress response from a functional perspective. Our research suggests that contexts that produce functionally adapted physiologic responses to stress also encourage a functionally adapted coping response-coping that can result in maladjustment in physical and mental health, but enables children to grow and develop within those contexts. In this article, I highlight the value of reframing maladaptive coping as functional adaptation to understand more completely the development of children's coping in different contexts, and the value of such a conceptual shift for coping-based theory, research, and intervention.Entities:
Keywords: allostatic load; coping; environmental context; functional adaptation; self-regulation; stress reactivity
Year: 2015 PMID: 26019717 PMCID: PMC4442090 DOI: 10.1111/cdep.12112
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Child Dev Perspect ISSN: 1750-8592