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1.
J Anxiety Disord ; 27(2): 171-7, 2013 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23434545

ABSTRACT

A number of factors are believed to confer risk for anxiety development in children; however, cultural variation of purported risk factors remains unclear. We examined relations between controlling and rejecting parenting styles, parental modeling of anxious behaviors, child interpretive biases, and child anxiety in a mixed clinically anxious (n=27) and non-clinical (n=20) sample of Latino children and at least one of their parents. Families completed discussion-based tasks and questionnaires in a lab setting. Results indicated that child anxiety was: linked with parental control and child interpretative biases, associated with parental modeling of anxious behaviors at a trend level, and not associated with low parental acceptance. Findings that controlling parenting and child interpretive biases were associated with anxiety extend current theories of anxiety development to the Latino population. We speculate that strong family ties may buffer Latino children from detrimental effects of perceived low parental acceptance.


Subject(s)
Anxiety/psychology , Hispanic or Latino/psychology , Parenting/psychology , Adolescent , Anxiety/ethnology , Child , Cultural Characteristics , Emigrants and Immigrants , Father-Child Relations/ethnology , Female , Hispanic or Latino/ethnology , Humans , Internal-External Control , Male , Mother-Child Relations/ethnology , Mother-Child Relations/psychology , Parent-Child Relations , Parenting/ethnology , Parents/psychology , Surveys and Questionnaires , White People
2.
J Fam Psychol ; 24(4): 439-48, 2010 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20731490

ABSTRACT

This study tested a theoretical model of the interrelations among controlling parenting, negative cognitive styles, children's anxiety, and race/ethnicity. The model suggests that, in general, cognitive style mediates the relation between maternal control and child anxiety but that the set of associations may differ as a function of ethnicity. African American (n = 235), Latin American (n = 56), and European American (n = 136) children completed measures of their anxiety, cognitive schemas reflecting impaired autonomy/performance and disconnection/rejection domains, and maternal control. Results indicated that a disconnection/rejection negative cognitive style mediated the effect of perceived maternal control on childhood anxiety only for the European American group. Maternal control was associated with the impaired autonomy/performance cognitive style for each of the three ethnic groups and with a disconnection/rejection cognitive style only for the European American and Latin American groups. Maternal control had an indirect effect on anxiety through the disconnection/rejection cognitive style for the Latin American group. The results are discussed in terms of how the model presented extends current theories of anxiety problems to African American and Latin American children by noting that significant cultural variations may exist in how parenting practices and cognitive styles relate to children's anxiety levels.


Subject(s)
Anxiety/psychology , Cognition , Models, Psychological , Mother-Child Relations , Adolescent , Black or African American/psychology , Anxiety/etiology , Child , Cross-Cultural Comparison , Ethnicity/psychology , Female , Hispanic or Latino/psychology , Humans , Mothers/psychology , Psychiatric Status Rating Scales , Regression Analysis , Surveys and Questionnaires , White People/psychology
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