| Literature DB >> 27004017 |
Marleen M E M van Doorn1, Rowella C W M Kuijpers2, Anna Lichtwarck-Aschoff2, Denise Bodden2, Mélou Jansen2, Isabela Granic2.
Abstract
The relation between maternal depressive symptoms and children's mental health problems has been well established. However, prior studies have predominantly focused on maternal reports of children's mental health problems and on parenting behavior, as a broad and unilateral concept. This cross-sectional study examined specific observed mother-child interaction behaviors through which maternal depressive symptoms are assumed to affect children's mental health problems. We expected higher rates of maternal depressive symptoms to predict higher rates of children's mental health problems, and we expected this relation to be mediated by low maternal warmth and high maternal psychological control. The sample consisted of 111 mother-child dyads referred for treatment. The mother-child interaction behaviors were coded according to the observed mother-child interaction tasks. Children's mental health problems were assessed using both maternal reports and children's self-reports. As expected, the results showed that maternal depressive symptoms were strongly related to maternal reports of children's internalizing and externalizing mental health problems. Surprisingly, maternal depressive symptoms were unrelated to children's self-reported depressive symptoms. Furthermore, mother-child interactions did not mediate the relation between maternal depressive symptoms and child mental health problems. Maternal depressive symptoms were associated with high maternal warmth, and high psychological control was associated with high levels of mother-reported externalizing mental health problems in children. These results partially replicate previous findings but add to these by using observational methods and multi-informant data. The importance of using a multi-informant and multi-method approach in assessing children's mental health problems in clinical practice and research are discussed.Entities:
Keywords: Childhood depression; Internalizing and externalizing mental health problems; Maternal depression; Mother–child interaction; Observations
Year: 2015 PMID: 27004017 PMCID: PMC4779455 DOI: 10.1007/s10826-015-0309-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Child Fam Stud ISSN: 1062-1024
Descriptive statistics and correlations of all study variables
| Variable |
| Percentage clinical range | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Maternal depressive symptoms | 12.67 (9.64) | 59 % | – | |||||
|
| ||||||||
| 2. Maternal warmth | 4.26 (1.06) | −.23* | – | |||||
| 3. Maternal psychological control | 2.29 (0.62) | −.08 | −.28** | |||||
|
| ||||||||
| 4. Internalizing problems (M) | 63.82 (9.39) | 32 % | .38*** | −.13 | .08 | – | ||
| 5. Externalizing problems (M) | 72.01 (5.81) | 71 % | .37*** | −.09 | .18 | .60*** | – | |
| 6. Depressive symptoms (C) | 7.76 (5.75) | 42 % | −.03 | −.06 | .09 | .13 | .11 | – |
For informant: M = reported by mother, C = reported by the child
* p < .05; ** p < .01; *** p < .001
Fig. 1Model of direct paths of maternal mother–child interaction behavior with maternal depressive symptoms and children’s mental health problems. Black lines indicate significant paths and dashed lines indicate non significant paths. *p < .05, **p < .01, ***p < .001
Standardized path coefficients of mediation analyses
| ß | SE | 95 % CIa | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Maternal depressive symptoms to internalizing problems (M) | |||
| Via maternal warmth | 0.03 | 0.02 | −0.03, 0.03 |
| Via maternal psychological control | −0.01 | 0.01 | −0.03, 0.01 |
| Maternal depressive symptoms to externalizing problems (M) | |||
| Via maternal warmth | −0.02 | 0.02 | −0.05, 0.02 |
| Via maternal psychological control | −0.02 | 0.02 | −0.06, 0.02 |
| Maternal depressive symptoms to depressive symptoms (C) | |||
| Via maternal warmth | 0.01 | 0.02 | −0.03, 0.04 |
| Via maternal psychological control | −0.01 | 0.02 | −0.04, 0.02 |
For informant: M = reported by mother, C = reported by the child
aBias corrected and accelerated (BCa) bootstrap confidence intervals
| Warmth | |
| Engagement | Mom seems to be ‘in tune’ with her child. She is interested and support his or her ideas, e.g., asking questions, active listening, shared humor, inside jokes, reminiscing |
| Joint attention | There is a shared focus of attention between mother and her child. Mom shows verbal and/or non-verbal activity indicating involvement (e.g., making eye contact, slight nodding) |
| Balance | There is a balanced conversational style of interaction between mother and her child. There is relevant turn-taking where the comments or questions of one follow from the utterances of the partner and the participation of the discussion is equal |
| Laughter | Mom shows joyous laughter. This does not enhance nervous laughter (a forced laughter that often does not ‘fit in’ with the context of the conversation, there was nothing funny) |
| Support | Mom shows direct expressions of caring or comfort (e.g., loving/caring statements, concerned questions/statements, joy, compliments, general support, empathy, reassurance/comfort, physical touch). Her voice is neutral or ‘up’ |
| Validation | Mom shows respect in her communication. She is accepting and open to suggestions, even if the child’s feelings or ideas are at odds with her own (e.g., active listening, understanding/acceptance, paraphrasing, apology, finishing sentences) |
| Psychological control | |
| Suggestive questioning | Mom asks a questions, which is actually a statement, e.g., Questions starting with “Wouldn’t you…/Couldn’t you…/Shouldn’t you…” |
| Superiority | Mom talks to the child in a pedantic manner, e.g., she uses the statements “it’s the way it is” of “everybody does…” in order to ground her opinion |
| Constraining | Mom interrupts the child or mom does not allow the child to express his or her opinion, e.g., mom asks a question, but does not allow the child to answer by continuing to talk or answer the question for the child |
| Invalidation | Mom validates the behavior or opinion of the child as wrong, e.g., she denies or argues with statements of the child |
| Criticism | Mom comments the behavior or expressions of the child, e.g., she rejects the opinion of the child or personally attacks the child |
| Intrusiveness | Mom comes physically close to the child and/or talks in a pervasive manner, e.g., she holds the head of the child in order to let the child make eye contact |
| Shame inducing | Mom lets the child feels ashamed of his or her behavior, expression/opinion, and/or general circumstances. This often concerns something that has happened in the past |
| Guilt inducing | Mom lets the child feels guilty of his or her behavior, expression/opinion, and/or general circumstances. The emphasize lies on the responsibility of the child for the behavior, expression/opinion, and/or general circumstances |
| Provocation | Mom disagrees continually with the child, independent of the context. Mom reacts negatively on everything the child says, e.g., asking ironic questions or mom competes with the child |
| Physics | Mom shows physical signs of invalidation, such as rolling with her eyes |