| Literature DB >> 28149684 |
Jose Ruben Parra-Cardona1, Hsueh-Han Yeh2, James C Anthony2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Chronically escalated parent-child conflict has been observed to elicit maladaptive behavior and reduced psychological well-being in children and youth. In this epidemiological study, we sought to estimate the occurrence of escalated parent-child conflict for United States (US) adolescent subgroups defined by (a) ethnic self-identification, and (b) nativity (US-born versus foreign-born).Entities:
Keywords: Multi-ethnic; Norms; Parenting; Parent–child conflict; Parent–youth conflict
Year: 2017 PMID: 28149684 PMCID: PMC5267568 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.2905
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PeerJ ISSN: 2167-8359 Impact factor: 2.984
Characterization of US-born and foreign-born 12-to-17-year-olds in the nationally representative sample.
Approximate unweighted numbers for self-identified ethnic groups (racial/ethnic heritage) by male–female and US/foreign-born origin. Data from the Restricted-use Data Analysis System (RDAS), National Surveys on Drug Use & Health, United States 2002–2013.
| US-Born ( | Foreign-Born ( | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Estimated number and percentages with frequent parent–child conflict | ||||
| Yes | No | Yes | No | |
| ( | ( | ( | ( | |
| 17,625 (74.06) | 50,690 (64.50) | 518 (37.07) | 2,495 (33.92) | |
| 2,100 (8.83) | 12,583 (16.01) | 67 (4.80) | 405 (5.51) | |
| Mexico origin | 2,070 (8.70) | 8,438 (10.74) | 270 (19.33) | 1,860 (25.30) |
| Non-Mexican origin | 1,413 (5.94) | 4,574 (5.82) | 269 (19.26) | 1,339 (18.21) |
| China origin | 175 (0.74) | 621 (0.79) | 64 (4.58) | 205 (2.79) |
| Non-Chinese origin | 412 (1.73) | 1,678 (2.14) | 209 (14.96) | 1,049 (14.27) |
Notes.
The RDAS system does not disclose actual cell counts, but Vsevolozhskaya & Anthony (2014) provide a method that can be used to derive unweighted effective sample size values as shown here.
Within-subgroup analyses were not calculated due to small sample sizes (e.g., Non-Hispanic African Americans of Caribbean origin vs. African origin).
Estimated covariate-adjusted odds ratio linking US-born status with odds of frequency of parent–child conflict, by self-identified ethnic groups.
Data from the United States National Surveys on Drug Use and Health, 2002–2013.
| AOR (95% CI) | ||
|---|---|---|
| All NHW children | 1.7 (1.5, 1.9) | <0.001 |
| Mexican heritage | 1.7 (1.5, 2.0) | <0.001 |
| Non-Mexican heritage | 1.6 (1.4, 1.8) | <0.001 |
| Chinese heritage | 0.9 (0.6, 1.2) | 0.708 |
| Non-Chinese heritage | 1.3 (1.1, 1.5) | 0.011 |
| All NHAA children | 0.8 (0.7, 1.1) | 0.229 |
Notes.
Description of the study sample is provided in the Methods section.
Adjusted odds ratio, AOR, with foreign-born as reference subgroup (covariates = age in years, sex: male versus female).
CI, Confidence interval.
Figure 1Estimated percentage with frequent parent-child conflict among US-born 12-to-17-year-olds, with 95% confidence intervals (color-shaded).
Data from the United States National Surveys on Drug Use and Health, 2002–2013 (non-Hispanic subgroups except as noted).
Figure 2Estimated percentage with frequent parent-child conflict among foreign-born 12-to-17-year-olds, with 95% confidence intervals (color-shaded).
Data from the United States National Surveys on Drug Use and Health, 2002–2013 (non-Hispanic subgroups except as noted).