Publication | Open Access
A Longitudinal Analysis of Parenting Practices, Couple Satisfaction, and Child Behavior Problems
58
Citations
43
References
2009
Year
Couple SatisfactionFamily MedicineChild Behavior ProblemsCouple Relationship SatisfactionFamily InvolvementMental HealthPsychologyFamily RelationshipFamily InteractionFamily LifePublic HealthFamily RelationshipsChild Well-beingBehavioral SciencesParenting PracticesParent DepressionChild DevelopmentSociologyMedicineFamily Dynamic
This longitudinal study examined the relationship between couple relationship satisfaction, parenting practices, parent depression, and child problem behaviors. The study participants (n = 148) were part of a larger experimental study that examined the effectiveness of a brief family-centered intervention, the Family Check-Up model. Regression analysis results indicated that our proposed model accounted for 38% of the variance in child problem behavior at Time 2, with child problem behavior and couple relationship satisfaction at child age 2 years each accounting for a significant portion of the variance in child problem behavior at age 3. Couple relationship satisfaction directly predicted child behavior problems over time. Clinical and research implications are discussed.
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