Abstract

Numerous studies suggest that symptoms of mental illness in parents become reflected in family and parent–child interactions, affecting the nature and quality of caregiving and, in turn, both short- and long-term child outcomes. Given the paucity of research in this area in Pakistan, present study aims to examine differences in parenting practices and behavioral problems among adolescent children of parents with psychopathology and without psychopathology. It also explores moderating role of adolescents’ coping on the relationship between parenting practices and behavioral problems. Sample included 348 parents and their adolescent children divided into two groups: Parents with Psychopathology and without Psychopathology. Alabama Parenting Questionnaire, Youth Self Report, and Brief COPE were used for data collection. Results indicated that adolescent children having parents with psychopathology have elevated levels of behavioral problems as compared to adolescent children of parents without psychopathology. Results of moderation analyses revealed that problem-focused coping, positive coping, and religious coping mitigated the potential impact of negative parenting practices on externalizing problems whereas denial exacerbated this relationship. The implications are discussed for implementation of effective preventive interventions with at risk families and children.

Highlights

  • Parental psychopathology is considered to be the important point of intervention for at-risk children and youth

  • The results indicated that positive involvement/parenting × religious coping interaction produced a significant change in R2 for adolescents’ externalizing problems {F (8, 164) = 4.93, ΔR2 = .01, p < .05} indicating that the relationship between positive involvement/parenting and externalizing problems is moderated by religious coping

  • Direction The present research highlights the role of two important coping strategies which may serve to mitigate the effects of dysfunctional parenting on externalizing problems among adolescents having parents with psychopathology

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Summary

Introduction

Parental psychopathology is considered to be the important point of intervention for at-risk children and youth. The present study attempts to explore moderating role of adolescents’ coping and effortful control on the relationship between parenting practices and behavioral problems among adolescents having parents with psychopathology. This research study intends to examine the possible moderating role of adolescents’ personal factors like coping and effortful control on the relationship between different forms of parenting practices and behavioral problems among adolescents having parents with psychopathology. Considering how these two adolescent characteristics interact with parenting to predict behavioral problems may be important because these two characteristics may serve to amplify or mitigate the effects of parenting practices in distinct ways. Coping strategies are broadly divided into two groups: active or problem-focused coping

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