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  5. Bidirectional effects between maternal mental health and adolescent internalizing problems across six years in Northern Ireland
 
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Bidirectional effects between maternal mental health and adolescent internalizing problems across six years in Northern Ireland

Alternative Title
Bidirectional Maternal Mental Health and Adolescent Internalizing
Author(s)
Luningham, Justin  
Wentz, Bethany  
Merrilees, Christine E.  
Taylor, Laura K.  
et al.  
Uri
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/12979
Date Issued
2022-06
Date Available
2022-07-06T11:38:35Z
Abstract
Emerging evidence indicates the existence of bidirectional relations between mothers’ mental health and adolescent adjustment, but few studies have examined these relations in contexts of high environmental adversity, including economic deprivation and political violence. Given other empirical connections between political violence and adolescent adjustment problems (Cummings et al., 2017), the impact of child adjustment problems on maternal mental health may be exacerbated in contexts of sectarian violence. Addressing this gap, latent change score modeling was used to examine interrelations between trajectories of maternal mental health and adolescent internalizing symptoms over time in communities afflicted by political conflict. Over six years, a total of 999 adolescent-mother dyads participated in a longitudinal study in Belfast, Northern Ireland. Six-hundred ninety-five families were originally recruited in year 1, with 304 recruited to supplement the sample in year 3; the largest available sample for a given year was 760 families. Models including maternal mental health, adolescent internalizing symptomatology, and political violence (i.e., sectarian antisocial behavior) as a time-varying covariate were tested. Results demonstrated that for both mothers and adolescents in a dyadic pairing, higher rates of symptomology in one member of the dyad were related to symptoms observed in the other member. Results also suggest that political violence and factors related to social deprivation increased symptoms across the dyad. This study advances understanding of the bidirectional impact between maternal mental health and adolescent internalizing over time in contexts of political violence.
Other Sponsorship
National Institute of Child Health and Human Development
Office of First Minister & Deputy First Minister, Government of Northern Ireland
Type of Material
Journal Article
Publisher
Wiley
Journal
Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry Advances
Volume
2
Issue
2
Start Page
1
End Page
9
Copyright (Published Version)
2022 The Authors
Subjects

Adversity

Family functioning

Internalising disorde...

Maternal factors

Longitudinal studies

DOI
10.1002/jcv2.12078
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
ISSN
2692-9384
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ie/
File(s)
No Thumbnail Available
Name

Final_clean_Maternal Adolescent Dyadic Relations NI.docx

Size

1.77 MB

Format

Unknown

Checksum (MD5)

a6cb7663af1a870c324b2e66f0195ff8

Owning collection
Psychology Research Collection

Item descriptive metadata is released under a CC-0 (public domain) license: https://creativecommons.org/public-domain/cc0/.
All other content is subject to copyright.

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