Although Chinese parents’ use of psychological control has been linked with adolescent mental health, no studies to our knowledge have considered how the association may differ across gender dyads of parents and adolescents and minimal research has examined the joint influences of Chinese mothers’ and fathers’ use of psychological control on adolescent depressive symptoms. Participants included 3069 Chinese adolescents who rated their depressive symptoms as well as their mothers’ and fathers’ use of psychological control. Regression results revealed that the positive association between fathers’ psychological control and depressive symptoms was significant at low but not at high levels of mothers’ psychological control. Moreover, the positive association between fathers’ psychological control and depressive symptoms was significant for daughters but not for sons. Mothers’ psychological control was consistently positively associated with adolescent depressive symptoms. Findings from this study provide a more nuanced understanding of how gender dyads within Chinese families may influence the link between parental psychological control and adolescent depressive symptoms and highlight the importance for mental health programs to include fathers in their treatment plans when working with Chinese adolescents and their families.
Zhang et al. (Sun,) studied this question.