Abstract

Parenting stress of mothers has frequently been linked to negative child outcomes. According to Abidin’s stress model, this relationship may be explained by dysfunctional parenting behaviors. In this study, we scrutinized the effects of both mothers and fathers in the pathway from parenting stress through parenting behaviors to subsequent adolescent behavior problems. We expected the association between parenting stress and adolescent behavior problems to be partially mediated by maternal and paternal parenting behaviors. Further, we expected crossover effects, i.e., that parenting stress of one parent was related to the parenting behavior of the other parent. We applied a 3-wave longitudinal design using data from 441 adolescents (52% girls) and their parents (419 fathers; 436 mothers). Parents reported on parenting stress (adolescent age range = 10.9–16.3 years). Adolescents reported on perceived parental overreactivity and warmth (age range = 12.9–18.3) and their own internalizing and externalizing problems (age range = 15.9–21.3). Despite cross-sectional significant associations between parenting stress, parenting behavior, and adolescent behavior problems, we found no evidence of longitudinal linkages. One exception was maternal parenting stress, which positively predicted later adolescent externalizing problems. Consequently, the mediating role of parenting behaviors was not supported. We found no crossover effects in the pathway from parenting stress to parenting behaviors. The discrepancies between our longitudinal and cross-sectional findings raise questions about the actual impact that parents have on their children’s outcome. Though, targeting mothers’ parenting stress may help to reduce adolescent externalizing problems and its ramifications at least to some extent.

Highlights

  • As several studies suggest that adolescent perceptions of parenting may be more important than actual parenting practices for adolescent behavioral outcomes (e.g., Hoeve et al 2009; Van Lissa et al 2019), we focused on adolescents’ perception of parenting behaviors

  • We exploratively investigated mother-father differences in the strength of the link between parenting stress and parenting behaviors, due to mixed support for the fathering vulnerability hypothesis provided by earlier studies

  • We examined the associations between parenting stress, adolescent-perceived parenting behaviors, and adolescent problem behavior from a family systems perspective

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Summary

Participants

This study is part of the ongoing Flemish Study on Parenting, Personality, and Development. As 21 families dropped out completely after T1, a sample of 441 families was available Of these families, 5 had missing data on maternal parenting stress, 22 on paternal parenting stress, 27 on maternal parenting behaviors, 31 on paternal parenting behaviors, and 38 on adolescent behavior problems. Families in the final sample did not differ from families that dropped out after T1 regarding parenting stress of mothers (t (455) = −0.66, p = 0.509) or fathers (t (436) = 0.11, p = 0.915), educational attainment of parents (χ2 (5) = 10.54, p = 0.061), marital status of parents (χ2 (1) = 2.96, p = 0.085), adolescent gender (p = 0.589, Fisher’s Exact Test), adolescent age (t (459) = −0.33, p = 0.741), or adolescent behavior problems at baseline (t (451) = 0.34, p = 0.736). Highest educational levels achieved for mothers and fathers were 0.6% and 2.6% for elementary school, 34.4% and 42.1% for secondary school, 50.0% and 34.4% for nonuniversity higher education (“college”), and 15.0% and 21.0% for university or higher, respectively

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