Article
Public, Environmental & Occupational Health
Irene N. Fierloos, Dafna A. Windhorst, Yuan Fang, Clemens M. H. Hosman, Harrie Jonkman, Matty R. Crone, Wilma Jansen, Hein Raat
Summary: Perceived social support is associated with parenting self-efficacy. Parents who perceive lower social support tend to have lower parenting self-efficacy, while an increase in perceived social support is associated with an increase in parenting self-efficacy.
Article
Psychiatry
Fei Li, Mingyu Xu, Danping Wu, Yun Tang, Lingli Zhang, Xin Liu, Li Zhou, Liping Jiang
Summary: This study investigated the predictors of parenting stress in mothers of children with ASD and explored the mechanisms underlying the relationship between child social impairment and parenting stress. The results showed significant correlations between parenting stress and child social impairment, parental self-efficacy, and social support. Parental self-efficacy completely mediated the relationship between child social impairment and parenting stress, while social support did not have a significant moderating effect.
FRONTIERS IN PSYCHIATRY
(2022)
Article
Family Studies
Zobeydeh Dehghan Manshadi, Arezoo Fallah, Haniyeh Chavoshi
Summary: This research aimed to investigate the negative impact of childhood maltreatment on the sense of parenting competition and the underlying mechanisms. The study found that parental reflective functioning and social support played mediating roles in the relationship between childhood maltreatment and negative feeling of parenting competence. The importance of parental reflective functioning and perceived social support should not be ignored when working with parents who have childhood trauma experiences.
CHILD ABUSE & NEGLECT
(2023)
Article
Psychology, Multidisciplinary
Chuibin Kong, Fakhra Yasmin
Summary: This study examined the impact of parental style on early childhood learning, and the mediating role of parental self-efficacy. The findings suggest that an authoritative parenting style is positively associated with learning outcomes among Chinese students, and high parental self-efficacy is linked to favorable parenting practices.
FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY
(2022)
Article
Psychology, Multidisciplinary
Carmit Matalon, Maria Nicoleta Turliuc
Summary: There is a negative association between preschool children's noncompliant behavior and parental marital satisfaction, which can be explained by parental self-efficacy and satisfaction with parenting. This suggests that children's noncompliance not only affects parents' satisfaction with parenting but also spills over into their marital relationship.
CURRENT PSYCHOLOGY
(2023)
Article
Psychology, Multidisciplinary
Laura A. A. Outhwaite
Summary: This study conducted a pilot randomized control trial of a parenting application for parents of children aged 0-6 months. The findings showed that parents who used the app had significantly higher parental self-efficacy compared to the control group. The frequency of app use was also associated with better parental self-efficacy outcomes.
FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY
(2023)
Article
Psychology, Multidisciplinary
Zhenzhen Liu, Xiaomin Sun, Yarong Guo, Shuting Yang
Summary: This study shows that mindful parenting has a positive impact on adolescents' life satisfaction, and this relationship is mediated by adolescents' coping self-efficacy. These findings highlight the importance of mindful parenting for adolescents' healthy development.
CURRENT PSYCHOLOGY
(2023)
Article
Psychology, Multidisciplinary
Jing Zhang, Xiaofang Lin, Shuangzhu Zhou, Baojuan Ye, Yu Zhang, Hongxing Xiong
Summary: This study aimed to explore the relationship among social support, post-traumatic growth, self-esteem, and parenting self-efficacy of parents of children with ASD, as well as the mechanism behind these relationships. The results showed significant positive correlations among social support, parenting self-efficacy, post-traumatic growth, and self-esteem. Additionally, it was found that post-traumatic growth played a partial mediating role in the relationship between social support and parenting self-efficacy, which was moderated by the level of parental self-esteem.
CURRENT PSYCHOLOGY
(2023)
Article
Public, Environmental & Occupational Health
Andreea Sitoiu, Georgeta Panisoara
Summary: This study explores the impact of parents' emotional intelligence on parenting style and competence. The results show a positive association between parents' emotional intelligence and their parenting competence, as well as the influence of parents' self-esteem on parenting competence. These findings highlight the importance of parents' emotional intelligence in the growth and education of children, and suggest the need for parenting training programs to enhance parenting skills.
FRONTIERS IN PUBLIC HEALTH
(2023)
Article
Psychology, Multidisciplinary
Songqin Wei, Timothy Teo, Anabela Malpique, Adi Lausen
Summary: This research explores the relationships between parental autonomy support, parental psychological control, and the autonomous regulation and dysregulation of Chinese university students in their studies and social media engagement. The findings indicate that when students' basic psychological needs are satisfied, they are more likely to experience autonomy-supportive parenting and exhibit autonomous learning behavior. Conversely, when their psychological needs are frustrated, there is a positive correlation with parental psychological control and dysregulation in social media engagement. Importantly, psychological need frustration acts as a mediator between parental psychological control and dysregulation in social media use.
FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY
(2022)
Review
Psychiatry
Fabian R. Seeger, Corinne Neukel, Katharina Williams, Marc Wenigmann, Leonie Fleck, Anna K. Georg, Felix Bermpohl, Svenja Taubner, Michael Kaess, Sabine C. Herpertz
Summary: Parental mental disorders, particularly borderline personality disorder, affect parenting behavior and increase the risk of psychopathology in children. Social support plays a crucial role in buffering these negative effects and promoting positive parenting, especially in parents with mental illnesses like BPD. Factors such as socioeconomic status, gender, and characteristics of the social network can influence the impact of social support on parenting behavior.
CURRENT PSYCHIATRY REPORTS
(2022)
Article
Psychology, Clinical
Gulriz Akaroglu
Summary: The study found that social support, spousal support, parental stress, life satisfaction, and gender have significant effects on parental role satisfaction. Parental stress is the most influential factor, followed by spousal support, social support, life satisfaction, and gender.
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF FAMILY THERAPY
(2023)
Article
Nursing
Mohammed Hamdan Alshammari, Atallah Alenezi
Summary: This study examines the impact of nursing education and technology integration on nursing workforce competencies and job satisfaction. It finds that nursing training and technology integration can improve nursing workforce competencies and job satisfaction, and that self-efficacy and social support play an important mediating role. Prior experience also has a moderating effect. The study has practical implications for nursing education, training, and professional development programs, as well as strategies to improve nursing workforce competencies and job satisfaction.
Article
Psychology, Multidisciplinary
Charo Reparaz, Sonia Rivas, Alfonso Osorio, Gabriela Garcia-Zavala
Summary: The study aimed to evaluate positive family functioning during adolescence by analyzing parents' competences and children's relationship abilities. High school students from four countries participated in the study, and results showed associations between parenting styles and education in values with adolescent outcomes.
FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY
(2021)
Article
Oncology
Chiung-Yao Yu, Jia-Hua Wang, Ling-Wei Wang, Tsae-Jyy Wang, Shu-Yuan Liang, Shu-Fang Wu, Yu-Ying Lu
Summary: The study aimed to explore the correlations between patients' opioid-taking self-efficacy, social support, and pain management satisfaction, and to evaluate the impact of social support and self-efficacy in explaining the variance in satisfaction. The results showed significant negative correlations between opioid-taking self-efficacy and pain management satisfaction, as well as between social support and satisfaction, with social support and self-efficacy explaining 17.20% and 5.20% of the variance, respectively.
SUPPORTIVE CARE IN CANCER
(2022)