Parental affective states and outcomes in children: a comparison between adoptive and biological parents
Abstract
Publication Date:
2016
abstract:
Several research reported that parental psychopathology represent an important risk factor for
psychological wellbeing in children and a growing literature refers to adoptive parenthood. Most
previous studies, carried out in this field, focused on the perception of only one parent (Rosnati et
al., 2013), mainly the mother. The current study sought to explore the association between parents’
affective states and psychological adjustment in children, by comparing, on the one hand, mothers
and fathers and, on the other, adoptive and biological families. The sample included 112 parents (55
mothers and 57 fathers; mean age = 43.7 years; sd = 6.4) divided in a group of adoptive parents
(AP; N= 47) and a group of biological parents (BP; N = 65). No age differences were observed
between the AP and the BP groups. Parents of both groups completed: a socio-demographic
questionnaire, the Short-Form 12 items Health Survey (SF-12), the Zung Depression and Anxiety
Self-Rating Scales (SDS; SAS); parents also filled in the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire
(SDQ) in reference to their adoptive or biological child. Our results highlighted the distinct
contribution of mothers and fathers in both BP and AP on different aspects of children’s
psychological adjustment. With regard to adoptive mothers, we found that: depressive levels
predicted emotional problems among children (adjusted R2 = .306); the Physical Health Scale of the
SF-12 predicted children’s conducted disorders (adjusted R2 = .239), hyperactivity (adjusted R2 =
.199) and peer problems (adjusted R2 = .242). With regard to adoptive fathers, the Mental Health
Scale of the SF-12 predicted children’s emotional problems (adjusted R2 = .173) and conduct
disorders (adjusted R2 = .277); at last, paternal depression explained 19.8% of the children’s
hyperactivity variance. These findings once again underlined the importance to consider both
mothers and fathers in adoption research and to further explore their differential impact.
Iris type:
1.5 Abstract in rivista
Keywords:
Parenthood, Adoptive Parents, Child’s adjustment
List of contributors:
Babore, Alessandra; Trumello, Carmen; Candelori, Carla; Teresina, Di Matteo; Freda, Marika
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