The role of parental illicit substance use and interparental conflict frequency on children’s externalizing behaviors over time

H. C. Ratliff, Jeremy B. Kanter
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Abstract

Parental illicit substance use is associated with increases in both interparental conflict frequency and children’s externalizing behaviors. There is a paucity of research examining the pathways linking these constructs. Assessing parental illicit substance use and interparental conflict frequency simultaneously can illustrate a process that potentially undermines children’s behavioral adjustment. Using a sample of stable, long-term couples and their children from the Future of Families and Child Wellbeing Study ( n = 1,011), the current study used path modeling and a multi-informant approach to examine the link between parental substance use and children’s later externalizing behaviors and if interparental conflict frequency mediated this association. Results indicated that parental substance use, assessed at the couple-level, was not associated with children’s later externalizing behavior, nor did interparental conflict frequency mediate this association. Post-hoc exploratory analyses found that mothers’ substance use was associated with children’s later externalizing behaviors, and this effect was stronger than fathers’ substance use, which was not associated with children’s later functioning. These results highlight the importance of examining how various aspects of substance use and different dimensions of interparental conflict might differentially impact children’s outcomes.
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随着时间的推移,父母使用非法药物和父母间冲突频率对儿童外化行为的影响
父母使用非法药物与父母间冲突频率和儿童外化行为的增加有关。目前还很少有研究探讨连接这些建构的途径。同时评估父母使用违禁药物和父母间冲突的频率,可以说明一个可能损害儿童行为适应的过程。本研究使用 "家庭未来与儿童福祉研究"(Future of Families and Child Wellbeing Study)中的稳定、长期夫妻及其子女样本(n = 1,011),采用路径建模和多信息量方法来研究父母使用药物与子女日后的外化行为之间的联系,以及父母间冲突频率是否对这一联系起中介作用。结果表明,在夫妻层面评估的父母使用药物情况与儿童日后的外化行为没有关联,父母间的冲突频率也没有调解这种关联。事后探索性分析发现,母亲使用药物与儿童日后的外化行为有关,而且这种影响比父亲使用药物更强,因为父亲使用药物与儿童日后的功能不相关。这些结果凸显了研究药物使用的各个方面和父母间冲突的不同方面如何对儿童的结果产生不同影响的重要性。
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