Responding to children's emotional and cognitive needs: Applying the cumulative model to the general population
Several risk factors are associated with neglectful behaviors. Yet their cumulative effect, which refers to the accumulation of risk regardless of the presence or absence of specific factors, remains unknown. This study aims to determine whether risk accumulation predicts caregivers' responses...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Canadian journal of psychiatry 2022-04, Vol.67 (4), p.250-258 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Several risk factors are associated with neglectful behaviors. Yet their cumulative effect, which refers to the accumulation of risk regardless of the presence or absence of specific factors, remains unknown. This study aims to determine whether risk accumulation predicts caregivers' responses to children's emotional and cognitive needs in the general population and to examine the presence of clinical thresholds.
A total of 1102 maternal figures of children aged 5 to 9 years old living in Quebec were questioned through a telephone survey. The response to children's emotional and cognitive needs was measured using a validated version of the Parent-Report Multidimensional Neglectful Behavior Scale. Ten individual, family and socioeconomic risk factors were combined to compute a cumulative risk index.
Results indicate that the cumulative index predicts the response to children's emotional and cognitive needs in the general population. This effect is observed for families exposed to at least two risk factors and it increases considerably when risk exposure reaches 5 factors.
This study supports the cumulative risk hypothesis, which until now had mainly been examined in vulnerable or clinical samples. It fosters a better statistical understanding of contexts compromising an optimal response to school age children's emotional and cognitive needs in the general population. This breakthrough is particularity important considering the challenges of identifying children at risk of having their needs neglected. |
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ISSN: | 1497-0015 |
DOI: | 10.1177/07067437211020597 |