Abstract

Parent-child relationship is developed and changed through reciprocal interactions between a child and his/her parent, and these interactions can strongly influence the child’s development across domains (e.g., emotional, physical, and intellectual). However, little is known about the parental perception of the child’s contribution to the dyadic parent-child relationship in terms of positive and negative behaviors. We therefore aimed to develop and validate an economical parent-report instrument to assess these important aspects. The validation study included 1642 mothers (Mage = 37.1) and 1068 fathers (Mage = 40.4) of 1712 children aged 2–10 years (Mage = 6.6) who completed the new instrument, the Child Relationship Behavior Inventory (CRBI). Statistical results indicated that the CRBI is a reliable and valid measure. Mothers reported more positive child behaviors towards them, whereas fathers perceived fewer problems with problematic relationship behavior than mothers. In their parents’ perception, girls showed more positive and less problematic relationship behaviors than boys. The frequency of problematic child relationship behavior significantly decreased with increasing child age while positive relationship behavior did not show any correlation with the child’s age. To assess both positive and negative child relationship behaviors could be helpful to better understand the relevance of these different aspects for the development of the parent-child relationship.

Highlights

  • The parent-child relationship can be described as a complex, dynamic and unique dyadic system that is more than the sum of its parts [1,2]

  • Principal axis factoring revealed that all items referring to positive child relationship behavior loaded positively on one factor whereas not all negative items loaded on the second factor

  • We found that only items describing the child actively showing a negative behavior loaded on the second factor whereas not showing a positive behavior did not

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Summary

Introduction

The parent-child relationship can be described as a complex, dynamic and unique dyadic system that is more than the sum of its parts [1,2]. It is characterized as non-voluntary, determined by laws and norms, interdependent, and transcontextual [1,3,4,5]. Parent-child relationship is developed and changed through daily, reciprocal interactions between a child and a parent in different relationship domains (e.g., attachment and authority) which form the basis for further interactions [1,6]. Public Health 2019, 16, 1123; doi:10.3390/ijerph16071123 www.mdpi.com/journal/ijerph

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