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In a sample of 559 children (ages 9-18), researchers investigated whether: (a) fear of abandonment mediated the association between postdivorce interparental conflict (IPC) and mental health problems, and (b) parent-child relationship quality moderated the association between IPC and fear of abandonment. Mediation analyses indicated that pretest IPC predicted fear of abandonment 3 months later, which then predicted child- and teacher-reported mental health problems 10 months later. The hypothesized protective effect of a high-quality parent-child relationship was not observed. IPC predicted fear of abandonment for all children, except for those with low- and moderate-quality father-child relationships, for whom IPC was not significantly related to fear of abandonment. Findings highlight the need to optimize child coping programs and improve parenting-after-divorce programs to reduce IPC.
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Karey L. O’Hara
Northern General Hospital
C. Aubrey Rhodes
Boston University
Sharlene A. Wolchik
Arizona State University
Child Development
Arizona State University
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O’Hara et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a105f7b57bfcc72645ff126 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1111/cdev.13539
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