Abstract

This study investigated the bidirectional relations between two dimensions of coparenting (the way parental figures cooperate in parenting), undermining and support, and child fearful temperament longitudinally from infancy to toddlerhood, while inspecting the moderating role of parents’ anxiety disorders. Questionnaire data on coparenting and child fearful temperament were obtained from 135 mothers, fathers, and their firstborns at 4 months, 12 months, and 30 months. Parental anxiety disorder severity was assessed with a semistructured interview before the birth of the child. Multilevel analysis revealed that, across measurement moments, undermining coparenting, but not supportive coparenting, was concurrently related to higher child fearful temperament. Parental anxiety disorder severity was related to more undermining coparenting but not to supportive coparenting. No moderation effects for parental anxiety disorder or for parent gender were found in the relations between coparenting and child fearful temperament. We conclude that more parental anxiety is related to a lower quality of the coparenting relationship, which in turn is associated to more child fearful temperament. More specifically, it appears that undermining coparenting, and not supportive coparenting, is related to child fearful temperament and parental anxiety disorder severity. Our results suggest that undermining coparenting, by both father and mother, is one of the mechanisms that may contribute to the intergenerational transmission of anxiety from parent to child. The coparenting relationship may be a useful target in the prevention and treatment of child anxiety.

Highlights

  • Published with license by Taylor & Francis© Marijke Metz, Mirjana Majdandžić, Susan Bögels

  • We found no significant associations between child fearful temperament and supportive coparenting, either concurrently or predictively

  • Our results are in line with the reasoning that parents are more undermining when a parent is high on anxiety disorder severity: We found that higher parental anxiety disorder severity before birth of the child was related to more undermining coparenting at 4 months, 12 months, and 30 months

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Summary

Introduction

Published with license by Taylor & Francis© Marijke Metz, Mirjana Majdandžić, Susan Bögels. Parental anxiety disorder severity was related to more undermining coparenting but not to supportive coparenting. We conclude that more parental anxiety is related to a lower quality of the coparenting relationship, which in turn is associated to more child fearful temperament. It appears that undermining coparenting, and not supportive coparenting, is related to child fearful temperament and parental anxiety disorder severity. © Marijke Metz, Mirjana Majdandžić, Susan Bögels. Based on Feinberg’s (2003) ecological model of coparenting, Majdandžić et al (2012) proposed the construct of coparenting as a way to introduce a systemic approach to the study of anxiety

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