5 results on '"Chronis-Tuscano, Andrea"'
Search Results
2. Early intervention for inhibited young children: a randomized controlled trial comparing the Turtle Program and Cool Little Kids.
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Chronis‐Tuscano, Andrea, Novick, Danielle R., Danko, Christina M., Smith, Kelly A., Wagner, Nicholas J., Wang, Christine H., Druskin, Lindsay, Dougherty, Lea R., and Rubin, Kenneth H.
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TREATMENT of behavior disorders in children , *PATIENT aftercare , *TREATMENT effectiveness , *RANDOMIZED controlled trials , *SOCIAL anxiety , *PARENTING , *EARLY intervention (Education) , *TEMPERAMENT , *STATISTICAL sampling , *PARENT-child relationships , *PARENTS - Abstract
Background: Children classified as behaviorally inhibited (BI) are at risk for social anxiety. Risk for anxiety is moderated by both parental behavior and social–emotional competence. Grounded in developmental–transactional theory, the Turtle Program involves both parent and child treatment components delivered within the peer context. Our pilot work demonstrated beneficial effects of the Turtle Program ('Turtle') over a waitlist control group. Herein, we report results of a rigorous randomized controlled trial (RCT) comparing Turtle to the best available treatment for young children high in BI, Cool Little Kids (CLK). Methods: One hundred and fifty‐one parents and their 3.5‐ to 5‐year‐old children selected on the basis of BI were randomly assigned to Turtle or CLK, delivered in group format over 8 weeks. Effects on child anxiety, life interference, BI, and observed parenting were examined at post‐treatment and 1‐year follow‐up. ClinicalTrials.gov registration: NCT02308826. Results: No significant main effect differences were found between Turtle and CLK on child anxiety; children in both programs evidenced significant improvements in BI, anxiety severity, family accommodation, and child impairment. However, Turtle yielded increased observed warm/engaged parenting and decreased observed negative control, compared with CLK. Parental social anxiety moderated effects; parents with higher anxiety demonstrated diminished improvements in child impairment, and parent accommodation in CLK, but not in Turtle. Children of parents with higher anxiety demonstrated more improvements in child BI in Turtle, but not in CLK. Conclusions: Turtle and CLK are both effective early interventions for young children with BI. Turtle is more effective in improving parenting behaviors associated with the development and maintenance of child anxiety. Turtle also proved to be more effective than CLK for parents with social anxiety. Results suggest that Turtle should be recommended when parents have social anxiety; however, in the absence of parent anxiety, CLK may offer a more efficient treatment model. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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3. Pathways from maternal shyness to adolescent social anxiety.
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Zeytinoglu, Selin, Neuman, Keara J., Degnan, Kathryn A., Almas, Alisa N., Henderson, Heather, Chronis‐Tuscano, Andrea, Pine, Daniel S., and Fox, Nathan A.
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BASHFULNESS ,SELF-evaluation ,HEALTH outcome assessment ,SOCIAL anxiety ,MOTHERHOOD ,PARENTING - Abstract
Background: Social anxiety is amongst the most prevalent adolescent mental health problems; however, it is often unrecognized due to its comorbidity with other anxiety problems such as generalized anxiety. Thus, understanding the unique developmental pathways to social anxiety is critical for improving its prevention. We examined the pathway from maternal shyness, when children were 4 years old, to adolescents' social anxiety at age 15 through social wariness at age 7. We hypothesized that childhood social wariness would mediate the association between maternal shyness and social anxiety in adolescence. Methods: Participants (N = 291; 54% female) were followed from early childhood to adolescence. Mothers reported on their own shyness when children were 4 years old. Social wariness toward unfamiliar peers was observed in the laboratory at ages 4 and 7. Adolescent social anxiety and generalized anxiety were assessed via self‐report, parent‐report, and clinical diagnoses at age 15. Results: Maternal shyness was positively associated with adolescent social anxiety but not generalized anxiety at age 15. Higher levels of maternal shyness at age 4 predicted greater social wariness at age 7, which in turn predicted greater social anxiety but not generalized anxiety at age 15. Social wariness at age 7 partially mediated the association between maternal shyness and adolescent social anxiety. Conclusions: This study identifies a unique developmental pathway from maternal shyness to adolescent social anxiety. Findings suggest that childhood social wariness connects maternal shyness to adolescent social anxiety. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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4. Bidirectional and interactive effects of child temperament and parenting in early childhood on the trajectory of social anxiety in adolescence.
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Lorenzo, Nicole E., Novick, Danielle R., Seddio, Kaylee, Degnan, Kathryn A., Henderson, Heather A., Almas, Alisa N., Chronis‐Tuscano, Andrea, and Fox, Nathan A.
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SOCIAL anxiety ,PARENTING ,ADOLESCENCE ,CHILD development ,PARENT-infant relationships ,TEMPERAMENT - Abstract
Introduction: Research suggests that certain parenting behaviors are best suited to promote optimal child development, depending on a child's distinctive temperamental presentation. This multimethod, longitudinal study examines the interactive effect of parenting and temperament in early childhood on the developmental trajectory of social anxiety in adolescence. Methods: Longitudinal growth modeling was used to examine the developmental trajectory of child social anxiety from age 9–15 and the interactive effect of parenting and child temperament at 36 months on the developmental trajectory of child social anxiety from age 9–15. Results: The slope of social anxiety from age 9–15 suggested a decrease in social anxiety throughout early adolescence. Furthermore, 36‐month behavioral inhibition (BI) predicted the trajectory of child social anxiety from age 9–15 when parents displayed low and high levels of dismissive and supportive parenting (at 36 months). Conclusions: Results support an interactive effect of infant temperament and parenting in early childhood (at 36 months) on the developmental trajectory of child social anxiety from age 9–15. Specifically, results suggest that engaging highly inhibited children with high supportive and low dismissive parenting may help reduce social anxiety over time in adolescence. Furthermore, parenting needs may differ for children high or low in BI to impact the developmental trajectory of social anxiety in adolescence, such that children who are high BI seem to benefit from low dismissive and high supportive parenting, and children who are low in BI seem to benefit more from high dismissive parenting. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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5. Examining a Developmental Pathway From Early Behavioral Inhibition to Emotion Regulation and Social Anxiety: The Moderating Role of Parenting.
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Suarez, Gabriela L., Morales, Santiago, Miller, Natalie V., Penela, Elizabeth C., Chronis-Tuscano, Andrea, Henderson, Heather A., and Fox, Nathan A.
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MOTHERS , *SELF-control , *BEHAVIOR , *SOCIAL anxiety , *PARENTING , *TEMPERAMENT , *EMOTION regulation , *ANXIETY - Abstract
We examined the longitudinal relation between behavioral inhibition (BI) and social anxiety symptoms and behavior and the mediating role of emotion regulation (ER). Moreover, we investigated the influence of parenting behavior on the development of ER strategies. Participants were 291 children (135 male) followed longitudinally from 2 to 13 years. Mothers were predominantly well educated and non-Hispanic Caucasian. Children were screened for BI using maternal report and observational measures (ages 2 and 3), parenting behavior was observed while children and their mothers participated in a fear-eliciting task (age 3), ER strategies were observed while children completed a disappointment task (age 5), and socially anxious behavior was measured via multimethod assessment at 10 and 13 years. Children who exhibited high BI in early childhood exhibited more socially anxious behavior across ages 10 and 13, and there was a significant indirect effect of BI on socially anxious behavior through ER strategies. Children who were high in BI demonstrated less engaged ER strategies during the disappointment task, which in turn predicted more socially anxious behavior. Furthermore, parenting behavior moderated the pathway linking early BI and ER strategies to social anxiety outcomes such that children who exhibited high BI and who received more affectionate/oversolicitous behavior from their mother displayed less engaged ER strategies and more socially anxious behavior than children low in BI or low in oversolicitous parenting behaviors. These findings expand on our understanding of the role that ER strategies and parenting play in the developmental pathway linking early BI to future social anxiety outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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