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1.
Infant Ment Health J ; 43(5): 783-796, 2022 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35913374

ABSTRACT

Significant disparities in education and social-emotional outcomes exist between racial/ethnic groups, particularly impacting children growing up in impoverished environments. Home visitation intervention programs, such as the Home Instruction for Parents of Preschool Youngsters (HIPPY), have been used for decades to improve academic readiness in these vulnerable preschool-aged children. Although the benefits of HIPPY on academic readiness and performance are well-documented, there has been no examination of social-emotional benefits to participating parent-child dyads. This study followed a HIPPY cohort over the course of 1 year to evaluate change in maternal and child social-emotional and behavioral functioning. Program participants demonstrated reduced parental stress and depression and increased parental social connection as well as reduced child externalizing behaviors and improved child adaptive functioning over the course of the program, even in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic and associated lockdown. These data highlight the additional benefits of early home-based academic intervention programs.


Las significativas disparidades en educación y resultados socioemocionales existen entre grupos raciales/étnicos, ejerciendo particularmente un impacto en los niños que crecen en ambientes empobrecidos. Los programas de intervención de visitas a casa, tales como la Instrucción en el Hogar para Padres y Niños Pequeños en Edad Prescolar (HIPPY), han sido utilizados por décadas para mejorar la preparación académica en estos niños de edad prescolar vulnerables. A pesar de que los beneficios de HIPPY en cuanto a preparación y rendimiento académicos están bien documentados, no se ha dado una revisión de los beneficios socioemocionales para las díadas progenitor-niño que participan. Este estudio le dio seguimiento a un grupo de HIPPY a lo largo del curso de un año para evaluar el cambio en el funcionamiento socioemocional y de comportamiento materno y en el niño. Los participantes en el programa demostraron un reducido nivel de estrés y depresión en progenitores y un aumento en la conexión social de progenitores, así como niveles reducidos de comportamiento externalizantes en el niño y un incremento en el funcionamiento de adaptación del niño a lo largo del curso del programa, aun dentro del contexto de la pandemia del COVID-19 y el aislamiento que con ella se asocia. Estos datos subrayan los beneficios adicionales de programas tempranos de intervención académica en casa.


Des inégalités importantes dans l'éducation et les résultats socio-émotionnels existent entre les groupes raciaux/ethniques, ce qui impacte particulièrement les enfants grandissant dans des milieux appauvris. Des programmes d'intervention de visite à domicile, comme le programme d'Instruction à Domicile de Parents de Jeunes Enfants d'Age Préscolaire (abrégé HIPPY en anglais), ont été utilisés depuis des dizaines d'années afin d'améliorer la préparation académique de ces enfants vulnérables d'âge préscolaire. Bien que les bénéfices du programme HIPPY sur la préparation académique et la performance académique soit bien documentée, les bénéfices socio-émotionnels de la participation des dyades parent-enfant n'ont jamais été examinés. Cette étude a donc suivi une cohorte HIPPY au cours d'une année afin d'évaluer le changement dans le fonctionnement émotionnel et comportemental maternel et de l'enfant. Les participantes ou participants au programme ont fait preuve d'une réduction du stress parental et de la dépression et de plus de lien social parental ainsi qu'une réduction de comportements d'externalisation de l'enfant et d'un fonctionnement adaptatif de l'enfant amélioré au cours du programme, même dans le contexte de la pandémie du covid-19 et du confinement. Ces données mettent en évidence les bénéfices supplémentaires des programmes d'intervention académique précoce à domicile.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , Pandemics , Child, Preschool , Communicable Disease Control , Emotions , Humans , Parents
2.
Clin Child Fam Psychol Rev ; 19(2): 162-84, 2016 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27072682

ABSTRACT

Anxiety is conceptualized as a state of negative emotional arousal that is accompanied by concern about future threat. The purpose of this meta-analytic review was to evaluate the evidence of associations between emotional competence and anxiety by examining how specific emotional competence domains (emotion recognition, emotion expression, emotion awareness, emotion understanding, acceptance of emotion, emotional self-efficacy, sympathetic/empathic responses to others' emotions, recognition of how emotion communication and self-presentation affect relationships, and emotion regulatory processes) relate to anxiety in childhood and adolescence. A total of 185 studies were included in a series of meta-analyses (N's ranged from 573 to 25,711). Results showed that anxious youth are less effective at expressing (r = -0.15) and understanding emotions (r = -0.20), less aware of (r = -0.28) and less accepting of their own emotions (r = -0.49), and report less emotional self-efficacy (r = -0.36). More anxious children use more support-seeking coping strategies (r = 0.07) and are more likely to use less adaptive coping strategies including avoidant coping (r = 0.18), externalizing (r = 0.18), and maladaptive cognitive coping (r = 0.34). Emotion acceptance and awareness, emotional self-efficacy, and maladaptive cognitive coping yielded the largest effect sizes. Some effects varied with children's age. The findings inform intervention and treatment programs of anxiety in youth and identify several areas for future research.


Subject(s)
Anxiety/physiopathology , Emotions/physiology , Adolescent , Child , Humans
3.
Attach Hum Dev ; 17(4): 337-53, 2015.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25965983

ABSTRACT

Although the attachment construct refers to a child's tendency to use an attachment figure both as a safe haven in times of distress as well as a secure base from which to explore, approaches to assessing attachment at older ages have focused on safe haven behavior. We tested modified versions of the Friends and Family Interview and the Security Scale Questionnaire to examine separately the correlates of safe haven and secure base support from parents. The main study (n = 107 children, 10-14-year-olds) included both interview and questionnaire assessments of safe haven and secure base support from mothers and fathers. The two methods converged in expected ways, and both showed associations with narrative coherence. Children reported greater safe haven support from mothers and greater secure base support from fathers, suggesting secure base support is a key aspect of father-child attachment. Both mother-child and father-child relationships were related to children's school adjustment and coping.


Subject(s)
Adaptation, Psychological , Object Attachment , Parent-Child Relations , Adolescent , Child , Data Collection/methods , Data Collection/standards , Educational Status , Father-Child Relations , Female , Humans , Male , Mother-Child Relations , Social Skills
4.
J Adolesc ; 37(7): 1089-97, 2014 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25150890

ABSTRACT

Etiological models identify difficulties in emotion regulation as potential contributors to the development and maintenance of anxiety. To date, studies with adolescents have not tested whether different types of anxiety symptoms are related to different emotion regulation difficulties. The current study aimed to examine specificity of associations between emotion regulation difficulties and symptoms of social and generalized anxiety in early adolescence. Ninety adolescents (ages 11-14 years) completed measures of emotion regulation and anxiety symptoms. Social and generalized anxiety symptoms showed similar bivariate correlations with emotion regulation. However, when controlling for generalized anxiety, social anxiety symptoms were uniquely related to emotion understanding, acceptance, evaluation, and reactivity. Generalized anxiety symptoms were uniquely related to emotion modification. The current study suggests that social and generalized anxiety symptoms have both common and unique associations with emotion regulation difficulties in early adolescence, and has implications for which emotion regulation skills to target in clinical interventions.


Subject(s)
Anxiety/psychology , Emotional Intelligence , Adaptation, Psychological , Adolescent , Child , Female , Humans , Male , Psychological Tests
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