The role of siblings in the development of externalizing behaviors during childhood and adolescence: a scoping review

Siblings play a critical role in children's behavioral development; yet sibling-focused assessment and intervention for youth behavior concerns are uncommon in social work practice settings. To address this research-to-practice gap a scoping review of research focused on siblings and the develo...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of family social work 2020-08, Vol.23 (4), p.318-337
Hauptverfasser: Waid, Jeffrey D., Tanana, Michael J., Vanderloo, Mindy J., Voit, Rachel, Kothari, Brianne H.
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container_end_page 337
container_issue 4
container_start_page 318
container_title Journal of family social work
container_volume 23
creator Waid, Jeffrey D.
Tanana, Michael J.
Vanderloo, Mindy J.
Voit, Rachel
Kothari, Brianne H.
description Siblings play a critical role in children's behavioral development; yet sibling-focused assessment and intervention for youth behavior concerns are uncommon in social work practice settings. To address this research-to-practice gap a scoping review of research focused on siblings and the development of externalizing behaviors in childhood and adolescence was conducted. Forty-three empirical studies published between 1997 and 2017 were reviewed and synthesized. Results illuminated a number of processes through which siblings influenced the development of externalizing behaviors. Identified behavioral domains included conduct problems, substance use, and sibling abuse. Sibling negativity and hostility, coercive sibling interactions, and sibling collusion were consistently associated with the development of conduct problems. Substance use behaviors were primarily influenced via sibling role modeling, social reinforcement, facilitating access, and co-use. Moderating effects of parental involvement, peer influence, sibling age range, and sibling gender composition were also observed. Less research was conducted on the processes underpinning sibling abuse, although prevalence studies suggest high rates of sibling victimization, particularly among close-age siblings and male-male dyads. Results indicate the need for social workers to consider both the characteristics of sibling groups and the quality of sibling relationships when assessing and intervening to prevent and address externalizing behavior problems in children and adolescents.
doi_str_mv 10.1080/10522158.2020.1799893
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source Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); EBSCOhost Education Source; Sociological Abstracts
subjects Adolescence
Adolescents
At risk populations
At-risk youth
Behavior
Behavior problems
behavioral health
behavioral mental health
Child development
Childhood
Children
Coercion
Conduct disorder
Cross-sectional studies
Drug use
Externalizing behaviour
Hostility
Influence
Parent participation
Parental influence
Peer influence
Peer relationships
prevention
Professional practice
Reinforcement
Siblings
Social development
Social work
Social workers
Substance abuse
Victimization
title The role of siblings in the development of externalizing behaviors during childhood and adolescence: a scoping review
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