Publication | Closed Access
Pathways from family economic conditions to adolescents' distress: Supportive parenting, stressors outside the family, and deviant peers
176
Citations
62
References
2002
Year
Family InvolvementFamily StrengtheningMental HealthSocial Determinants Of HealthSupportive ParentingChild Mental HealthSocial SciencesPsychologyDeviant PeersFamily RelationshipFamily InteractionAbstract Economic HardshipYouth Well-beingFamily LifeFamily Economic ConditionsFamily RelationshipsHealth SciencesChild Well-beingAdolescent PsychologyPsychosocial FactorPsychosocial ResearchPsychosocial IssueChild DevelopmentFamily EconomicsExternalizing SymptomsSociologyFamily PsychologyFamily Dynamic
Abstract Economic hardship is a stressor that affects large numbers of children and their families. This study estimated a model that included pathways linking economic conditions to the internalizing and externalizing symptoms of a multiethnic sample of urban adolescents. Similar to other prominent models, this model included parental distress and parenting as key constructs, but the expanded ecological model also included stressors outside the family and adolescents' associations with deviant peers as possible explanatory factors. Data from 300 adolescents and their parents were consistent with a model that showed linkages between economic conditions, parental depressive symptoms, supportive parenting, and internalizing symptoms. Stressors outside the family were associated with deviant peer affiliations which, in turn, predicted internalizing and externalizing symptoms. The implications of these findings for understanding economic conditions' influence on adolescents' mental health are discussed. © 2002 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
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