Familial influences on internalizing symptomatology in Latino adolescents: An ecological analysis of parent mental health and acculturation dynamics

The aim of this study was to examine if family system dynamics (e.g., parent mental health, marriage quality, conflict, and cohesion) that have often been overlooked when studying Latino families play a more important role in predicting adolescent internalizing symptoms than acculturation processes....

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Veröffentlicht in:Development and psychopathology 2014-11, Vol.26 (4pt2), p.1191-1207
Hauptverfasser: Smokowski, Paul R., Rose, Roderick A., Evans, Caroline B. R., Cotter, Katie L., Bower, Meredith, Bacallao, Martica
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container_end_page 1207
container_issue 4pt2
container_start_page 1191
container_title Development and psychopathology
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creator Smokowski, Paul R.
Rose, Roderick A.
Evans, Caroline B. R.
Cotter, Katie L.
Bower, Meredith
Bacallao, Martica
description The aim of this study was to examine if family system dynamics (e.g., parent mental health, marriage quality, conflict, and cohesion) that have often been overlooked when studying Latino families play a more important role in predicting adolescent internalizing symptoms than acculturation processes. Data comes from the Latino Acculturation and Health Project, a longitudinal investigation of acculturation in Latino families in North Carolina and Arizona (Smokowski & Bacallao, 2006, 2010). Researchers conducted in-depth, community-based interviews with 258 Latino adolescents and 258 of their parents in metropolitan, small-town, and rural areas. Interviews were conducted at four time points at intervals of approximately 6 months. Parent and adolescent ratings of the adolescent's internalizing symptoms were used as the dependent variable in a longitudinal hierarchical linear model with a rater effects structure. Results showed that parent–adolescent conflict and parent mental health (fear/avoidance of social situations and humiliation sensitivity) were significant predictors of adolescent internalizing symptoms. Acculturation scales were not significant predictors; however, internalizing symptoms decreased with time spent in the United States. Females and adolescents from lower socioeconomic status families reported more internalizing symptoms, while participants who had been in the United States longer reported fewer internalizing symptoms. Implications were discussed.
doi_str_mv 10.1017/S0954579414000960
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subjects Acculturation
Adolescent
Arizona - ethnology
Child psychology
Developmental psychology
Family Relations - ethnology
Female
Hispanic Americans - ethnology
Humans
Male
Mental Disorders - ethnology
North Carolina - ethnology
Parent-Child Relations - ethnology
Parents & parenting
Parents - psychology
Psychopathology
Regular Articles
title Familial influences on internalizing symptomatology in Latino adolescents: An ecological analysis of parent mental health and acculturation dynamics
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