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Adolescents', mothers', and fathers' gendered coping strategies during conflict: Youth and parent influences on conflict resolution and psychopathology.

Authors :
MARCEAU, KRISTINE
ZAHN-WAXLER, CAROLYN
SHIRTCLIFF, ELIZABETH A.
SCHREIBER, JANE E.
HASTING, PAUL
KLIMES-DOUGAN, BONNIE
Source :
Development & Psychopathology; Nov2015, Vol. 27 Issue 4pt1, p1025-1044, 20p
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

We observed gendered coping strategies and conflict resolution outcomes used by adolescents and parents during a conflict discussion task to evaluate associations with current and later adolescent psychopathology. We studied 137 middle- to upper-middle-class, predominantly Caucasian families of adolescents (aged 11-16 years, 65 males) who represented a range of psychological functioning, including normative, subclinical, and clinical levels of problems. Adolescent coping strategies played key roles both in the extent to which parent-adolescent dyads resolved conflict and in the trajectory of psychopathology symptom severity over a 2-year period. Gender-prototypic adaptive coping strategies were observed in parents but not youth, (i.e„ more problem solving by fathers than mothers and more regulated emotion-focused coping by mothers than fathers). Youth-mother dyads more often achieved full resolution of conflict than youth-father dyads. There were generally not bidirectional effects among youth and parents' coping across the discussion except boys' initial use of angry/hostile coping predicted fathers' angry/hostile coping. The child was more influential than the parent on conflict resolution. This extended to exacerbation/alleviation of psychopathology over 2 years: higher conflict resolution mediated the association of adolescents' use of problemfocused coping with decreases in symptom severity over time. Lower conflict resolution mediated the association of adolescents' use of angry/hostile emotion coping with increases in symptom severity over time. Implications of findings are considered within a broadened context of the nature of coping and conflict resolution in youth-parent interactions, as well as on how these processes impact youth well-being and dysfunction over time. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09545794
Volume :
27
Issue :
4pt1
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Development & Psychopathology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
110564977
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1017/S0954579415000668