Mechanisms Linking Interparental Aggression to Child Dental Caries

Research has garnered support for a systemic view of factors affecting child dental caries that accounts for the influence of social factors such as the family environment. Our previous work has demonstrated the association between mother-to-father emotional aggression and child caries. The present...

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Veröffentlicht in:Caries research 2017-01, Vol.51 (2), p.149-159
Hauptverfasser: Lorber, M.F., Maisson, D.J.N., Slep, A.M.S., Heyman, R.E., Wolff, M.S.
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container_end_page 159
container_issue 2
container_start_page 149
container_title Caries research
container_volume 51
creator Lorber, M.F.
Maisson, D.J.N.
Slep, A.M.S.
Heyman, R.E.
Wolff, M.S.
description Research has garnered support for a systemic view of factors affecting child dental caries that accounts for the influence of social factors such as the family environment. Our previous work has demonstrated the association between mother-to-father emotional aggression and child caries. The present study builds on these results by evaluating pathways that might explain this relation. Families (n = 135) completed a multimethod assessment of mother-to-father emotional aggression, child caries, and several hypothesized mediators (i.e., child cariogenic snack and drink intake, child internalizing behaviors, child salivary cortisol and α-amylase reactivity, parental laxness, child oral hygiene maintenance, and parental socialization of child oral hygiene maintenance). Mediation analyses partially supported the role of the child's diet as a mechanism linking mother-to-father emotional aggression and child caries. However, children's neglect of oral hygiene, parental laxness, and child emotional and biological disturbances failed to stand as conduits for this association. Future investigations should expand upon these results to better establish the causal links that could only be suggested by the present cross-sectional findings.
doi_str_mv 10.1159/000453672
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source MEDLINE; Karger Journals Complete
subjects Adult
Aggression
Amylases
Analysis
Behavior
Child
Children
Cross-Sectional Studies
Dental caries
Dental Caries - epidemiology
Dental Caries - etiology
Dentistry
Family
Family relations
Family Relations - psychology
Female
Glucocorticoids
Health aspects
Humans
Male
Mediation
Oral Hygiene
Original Paper
Parenting
Parents - psychology
Steroids (Organic compounds)
Toothbrushing
title Mechanisms Linking Interparental Aggression to Child Dental Caries
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