Abstract

Harsh parenting can predispose a child to emotional distress, whereas a supportive childhood environment furthers later subjective well-being. We investigated whether the mother’s self-reported assessment of her strictness and the adult offspring’s recollections of the disciplinary methods of their parents are reflected in the adult offspring’s recalled parental images and current emotional distress, anxiety and depression as assessed by the Hopkins Symptom Check List (HSCL-25). Further, we investigated whether the offspring’s parental images were also associated with the HSCL-25 scores. Data was collected from northern Finland. The mothers responded to a questionnaire when their child was seven years old (N = 354) and the adult offspring responded at age 28–29 (N = 337). The mother’s assessment of her own strictness was associated both with the adult offspring’s dominating images of their parents and their current emotional distress, anxiety and depression. The offspring’s recollections of restriction and corporal punishment were associated with dominating parental images, and these images further with current emotional distress, anxiety and depression of the offspring. Correspondingly, the offspring’s recollections of parental dialogic discipline were associated with supportive and sociable parental images, and recalled paternal dialogic discipline was associated with lower current emotional distress, particularly in the female offspring. In conclusion, harsh parenting was associated with dominating parental images, which in turn were associated with emotional distress in adulthood. Dialogic discipline and the father’s role in parenting were emphasized in the offspring’s well-being, but more research is needed to assess the importance of paternity for the offspring’s subjective well-being.

Highlights

  • Adverse childhood experiences and early interpersonal difficulties have been linked with emotional distress in adulthoodKuopio, Finland 5 Department of Mathematical Sciences, University of Oulu, Oulu, Finland (Oshio et al 2013), and serious family dysfunction – such as domestic violence – with subsequent mental and somatic problems (Arnow 2004)

  • About 13–18% of the adult offspring reported having current emotional distress; 17.4% of them scored above the screening cut–off point (≥ 1.55) on the Hopkins Symptom Checklist-25 (HSCL-25) total scale, 12.6% on the HSCL anxiety subscale and 18.3% on the HSCL depression subscale

  • The purpose of the study was to determine whether the recollections of parental disciplinary methods, are reflected either in the adult offspring’s recalled parental images or in their current emotional distress, anxiety and depression, and whether these two outcomes are related

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Summary

Introduction

Several studies have found specific associations between childhood physical punishment – such as pushing, grabbing, shoving, slapping, hitting – and difficulties in later psychological, physical or social development (Afifi et al 2012; Breen et al 2015; Gershoff 2002; 2013; Osterman et al 2014; 2018; Yaffe and Burg 2014). In one Finnish cross-sectional study, frequent corporal punishment in childhood was associated with depression and other mental health problems during adulthood (Osterman et al 2014). The adverse effects of physical punishment have led to legislation against corporal punishment in many countries, some researchers and professionals still disagree about the. In a survey in 1981, physical punishment was accepted by 44% of the respondents, at least in exceptional situations (Peltoniemi 1983), whereas in a study carried out in 2014, only 15% of the respondents agreed at least partly on the acceptability of physical punishment of children (Sariola 2014)

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