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Coping with intergenerational family conflict among Asian American college students.
132
Citations
60
References
2005
Year
EthnicityFamily ConflictEducationMental HealthSocial SupportSocial SciencesPsychologyIntergenerational Family ConflictFamily RelationshipStrategies-problem SolvingFamily InteractionFamily LifeFamily RelationshipsCoping BehaviorPsychosocial IssueCultureSociologyInterpersonal RelationshipsFamily PsychologyIntergenerational RelationFamily Dynamic
Two coping strategies-problem solving and social support seeking-were hypothesized to differentially moderate the effects of intergenerational family conflict on well-being and adjustment in a college sample of 117 Asian American young adult children. Results indicated that social support served as a protective-stabilizing factor that buffered the effects of family conflict on positive affect and somatic distress. Problem-solving coping served as a protective-reactive factor that had a positive effect on positive affect when family conflict was low and a negative effect when family conflict was high. The potential implications of these findings for counseling and conducting research on Asian American college students are discussed.
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