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Parenting Stress and Child Behavior Problems Among Clinic-Referred Youth: Cross-Cultural Differences Across the US and Korea

Authors :
Joohee Kim
Chad Ebesutani
Hye Min Bang
Hee-Jung Byun
Kyongmee Chung
Bruce F. Chorpita
Dong-Soo Suh
John R. Weisz
Source :
Child Psychiatry & Human Development. 44:460-468
Publication Year :
2012
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2012.

Abstract

Due to increased multiculturalism in the US and abroad, there is a need for increased understanding of the different ways in which parenting stress is related to child problems across cultures. In the present study, we investigated (a) differences in reported parenting stress and childhood problem behaviors across a Korean (n = 71) and US (n = 71) sample, as well as (b) differences in the ways in which parenting stress and childhood problems were related across Korean and US children based on mothers' reports. Results revealed that Korean mothers reported significantly higher parenting stress yet significantly lower childhood problem behaviors compared to US mothers. In addition, mother-based reports of child problems were significantly associated with parenting stress in the US sample, but not in the Korean sample. Clinical implications and culturally-relevant issues relevant to these findings are addressed, including a potential under-reporting bias of child problems among Asian parents.

Details

ISSN :
15733327 and 0009398X
Volume :
44
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Child Psychiatry & Human Development
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....92537e4e34ed3746c43a80e998e1ee46