Parenting and child externalising behavioural problems: an exploration of the role of parental cognitions and characteristics
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Abstract
Background/Aims: Understanding predictors, moderators and mediators of child
externalising behaviour problems could lead to improvements in engagement and
outcomes for children and their families. Parental cognitions, including self-efficacy
and attributions, have been proposed as mediators in the relationship between
parenting and child behaviour problems. Although mediation is increasingly
recognised as an effective way of examining relationships between variables, only a
small proportion of studies that identify potential mediators actually conduct a
mediation analysis. This thesis consists of two studies: a systematic review (Journal
Article 1) and an empirical study (Journal Article 2). The systematic review
investigated the ways in which mediation analysis has been used to examine the role
of parental cognitions in studies of child behavioural problems, and to assess the
methodological quality of these studies. The empirical study investigated the role of
parental cognitions and characteristics in relation to pre-school child externalising
behaviour problems.
Methods: In Journal Article 1, a systematic search of three electronic databases, a
quality assessment of included studies, and a subsequent narrative synthesis were
conducted. In Journal Article 2, 125 parents of children aged 3-6 years old attending
a community-based parent management training programme, across three local
authorities, completed a battery of self-report questionnaires before and after the
intervention. Correlational and mediation analyses were conducted to investigate
relationships between child behaviour and parental attachment style, metacognition,
dysfunctional attributions and parental stress. We also tested the possibility that
parents’ reported levels of stress and child behaviour problems, and their
demographic variables, played a role in whether they completed the intervention.
Results: In Journal Article 1, after screening, 14 studies were reviewed using an
adapted quality criteria tool. The most commonly studied parental cognition was
parental self-efficacy, with a small number of studies investigating parental
attributions. A variety of approaches to mediation analysis had been used and caution
should be exercised when interpreting the results of many of the reviewed studies.
Despite a growing recognition of the limitations of some traditional methods (e.g.
causal steps approach), research into mediators of child externalising behaviour
could be improved by a wider adoption of more appropriate tools, in line appropriate
theoretical frameworks. In Journal Article 2, as hypothesised, the results indicated
significant relationships between parents' attachment insecurity and baseline levels of
parental stress, parental attributions and child behaviour problems. Support was
found for the hypothesis that parental attributions mediated the relationship between
attachment insecurity and child externalising behaviour problems. We did not find
significant that any demographic variables other than parent age predicted whether
parents completed the programme.
Conclusions: Taken together, the two studies provide evidence of a complex
relationship between parental factors, particularly parental cognitions, and
externalising child behaviour problems. The systematic review found some evidence
that parental cognitions mediate how aspects of parenting (e.g. behaviour and affect)
and child externalising behaviour problems are associated, and the empirical study
also showed that parental attributions are important in relation to child behaviour
problems. Of particular interest was the finding that they mediate the relationship
between child behaviour problems and attachment insecurity. However, to advance
the field both theoretically and clinically, future studies should endeavour to ensure
adequate sample size and power, using optimal study designs, in conjunction with
strong theoretical grounding. Exploring cognitive mediators beyond self-efficacy,
such as parental attributions, will allow us to further develop our understanding of
the relationship between child behaviour and parenting.
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