| Literature DB >> 26938485 |
Hannah F Rasmussen1, Jessica L Borelli1, Cindy Decoste2, Nancy E Suchman3.
Abstract
As a group, substance-abusing parents are at risk for maladaptive parenting. The association between substance abuse and parenting may result, in part, from parents' emotional disengagement from the parent-child relationship, which makes perceiving and responding to children's cues more challenging. In this study, we examined whether substance-abusing mothers' levels of disengagement from their relationship with their children (ages 2-44 months), operationalized in two different ways using parenting narratives (representational and linguistic disengagement), prospectively predicted children's engagement and disengagement cues during a structured mother-child interaction. Within a sample of 29 mothers, we tested the hypotheses that greater maternal disengagement at Time 1 would predict a decrease in children's engagement and an increase in children's disengagement at Time 2. Results indicated that representational disengagement predicted a decrease in children's engagement cues whereas linguistic disengagement predicted an increase in children's disengagement cues. Results provide partial support for a reciprocal, iterative process in which mothers and children mutually adjust their emotional and behavioral disengagement with one another.Entities:
Keywords: Einfühlungsvermögen; Interaction mère-enfant; Mutter-Kind-Interaktion; Rückzug; Substanzmissbrauch; abuso de sustancia; behavioral cues; behaviorale Signale; desconexión; disengagement; désengagement; interacción madre-niño; mother-child interaction; sensibilidad; sensibilité; sensitivity; señales de conducta; signes du comportement; substance abuse; toxicomanie; 感受性; 抽離; 敏感度; 母子互動; 母子相互交流; 濫用藥物; 物質乱用; 行動的合図; 行為線索; 離脱
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26938485 PMCID: PMC5103616 DOI: 10.1002/imhj.21552
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Infant Ment Health J ISSN: 0163-9641