Provided and received positive and negative social control, relationship satisfaction, and sedentary behavior in parent-child dyads

The close relationship processes and health model and the dyadic health influence model posit that relationship beliefs (eg, relationship satisfaction) and influence strategies (eg, provision and receipt of positive and negative social control) mediate health behavior change. However, evidence for s...

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Veröffentlicht in:Annals of behavioral medicine 2025-01, Vol.59 (1)
Hauptverfasser: Siwa, Maria, Banik, Anna, Szczuka, Zofia, Kulis, Ewa, Boberska, Monika, Wietrzykowska, Dominika, Knoll, Nina, DeLongis, Anita, Knäuper, Bärbel, Luszczynska, Aleksandra
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container_title Annals of behavioral medicine
container_volume 59
creator Siwa, Maria
Banik, Anna
Szczuka, Zofia
Kulis, Ewa
Boberska, Monika
Wietrzykowska, Dominika
Knoll, Nina
DeLongis, Anita
Knäuper, Bärbel
Luszczynska, Aleksandra
description The close relationship processes and health model and the dyadic health influence model posit that relationship beliefs (eg, relationship satisfaction) and influence strategies (eg, provision and receipt of positive and negative social control) mediate health behavior change. However, evidence for such mediation in parent-child dyads is limited. Two complementary mediation hypotheses were tested: (1) social control forms indirect relationships with sedentary behavior (SB), via relationship satisfaction acting as a mediator; and (2) relationship satisfaction forms indirect relationships with SB, with social control operating as a mediator. Data from 247 parent-child dyads (9- to 15-year-old children) were analyzed using manifest mediation models. SB was measured with GT3X-BT accelerometers at Time 1 (T1; baseline) and Time 3 (T3; 8-month follow-up). Relationship satisfaction and social control were assessed at T1 and Time 2 (T2; 2-month follow-up). Path analysis models, controlling for baseline SB, were fit. Received positive control (children, T1) was associated with higher relationship satisfaction in both children and parents (T2), which in turn were related to lower and higher parental SB at T3, respectively. Provided positive control (parents; T1) was related to higher SB (T3) in children. Relationship satisfaction among children (T1) predicted higher levels of received positive and negative control (children, T2). Provided and received positive social control may form direct and indirect associations with SB in parent-child dyads. Future research may need to consider further subtypes of positive control, which may explain the divergent effects of this form of control on SB.
doi_str_mv 10.1093/abm/kaae092
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source Oxford University Press Journals All Titles (1996-Current); MEDLINE
subjects Adolescent
Adult
Child
Female
Humans
Male
Parent-Child Relations
Personal Satisfaction
Sedentary Behavior
title Provided and received positive and negative social control, relationship satisfaction, and sedentary behavior in parent-child dyads
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