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Journal Article

Citation

Weitkamp K, Seiffge-Krenke I. J. Youth Adolesc. 2019; 48(3): 469-483.

Affiliation

University of Mainz, Mainz, Germany.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2019, Holtzbrinck Springer Nature Publishing Group)

DOI

10.1007/s10964-018-0928-0

PMID

30264209

Abstract

Research on parental rearing dimensions faced ethnocentric criticism for mainly focusing on adolescents in Western industrialized countries. Over the past decade, the phenomenon of anxious parenting, so called "helicopter parenting", gained attention in popular media as well as scholarly publications in addition to support and psychological control. Whether these parenting dimensions, which were associated with different health outcomes in adolescents, were only occurring in the Western world or are visible cross-culturally, has not been sufficiently studied. Therefore, it is unclear whether these links exist also for adolescents from other parts of the world. Additionally, the involvement of fathers in child rearing continues to be neglected in adolescent psychopathology research. The current cross-cultural study tested the association of maternal and paternal rearing dimensions with youth internalizing and externalizing psychopathology in a sample of 2415 adolescents (56% female, 15.33 years, SD = 0.61) from eight countries (Argentina, France, Germany, Greece, Pakistan, Peru, Poland, and Turkey). Hierarchical regression models showed that internalizing symptomatology was associated with mothers' support, psychological control, and anxious rearing as well as fathers' psychological control up and above predictors like country and mother's level of education. For predicting externalizing symptomatology, mother's anxious rearing, mother's psychological control, and father's support as well as father's psychological control were significant up and above adolescents' gender, standard of living, and country. To conclude, across countries, anxious rearing and psychological control experienced from both parents were substantially linked with adolescent mental health.


Language: en

Keywords

Adolescence; Anxious rearing; Cross-cultural; Mental health; Parenting; Psychological control

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