Existential Well-Being, Drug Abuse, and Parenting Stress in African American Women

被引:0
|
作者
Dorian A. Lamis
Lindsey M. West
Natasha Mehta
Claire Lisco
Nicholas Tarantino
Christina Wilson
Nadine J. Kaslow
机构
[1] Emory University School of Medicine,Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences
[2] Georgia Regents University,Department of Psychology
[3] Georgia State University,Department of Psychology
[4] Atlanta VA Medical Center,undefined
来源
International Journal of Mental Health and Addiction | 2014年 / 12卷
关键词
African American; Spirituality; Existential well-being; Parenting; Drug abuse;
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学科分类号
摘要
The current study examined the influence of existential well-being and drug abuse on parenting stress in a sample of low-income African American women (n = 152). Whereas existential well-being served as a protective factor against all three forms of parenting stress measured (parental distress, difficult child, and parent–child dysfunctional interaction), drug abuse was a risk factor for all three. Existential well-being was also inversely related to drug abuse. A path analysis was conducted to further elucidate the cross-sectional associations among these variables. A positive, indirect effect of existential well-being on two of the three components of parenting stress, parental distress and perceived child behavior problems, but not the third, parent–child relationship quality, through level of drug abuse was found in support of partial meditation. Clinical implications regarding enhancing and using existential well-being as a culturally-relevant coping mechanism for African American caregivers are considered, and the etiological mechanisms of parenting stress are discussed.
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页码:686 / 699
页数:13
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