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https://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/245467
Title: | Mediating Effects of Parental Stress on Harsh Parenting and Parent-Child Relationship during Coronavirus (COVID-19) Pandemic in Singapore | Authors: | Chung, Gerard Lanier, Paul Wong, Peace Yuh Ju |
Keywords: | Social Sciences Psychology, Clinical Family Studies Psychology Coronavirus (COVID-19) Singapore Parental stress Harsh parenting Relationship EXTERNALIZING BEHAVIOR INTERACTION THERAPY SPANKING OUTCOMES |
Issue Date: | Jul-2022 | Publisher: | SPRINGER/PLENUM PUBLISHERS | Citation: | Chung, Gerard, Lanier, Paul, Wong, Peace Yuh Ju (2022-07). Mediating Effects of Parental Stress on Harsh Parenting and Parent-Child Relationship during Coronavirus (COVID-19) Pandemic in Singapore. JOURNAL OF FAMILY VIOLENCE 37 (5) : 801-812. ScholarBank@NUS Repository. | Abstract: | Because of the Coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic, “Circuit-breaker” safety distancing was implemented in Singapore from April to May 2020. Schools and workplaces were closed and parents had to balance telecommuting with parenting responsibilities. Coupled with the high degree of economic uncertainty and reduced social support, these circumstances are hypothesized to increase parenting stress. Based on the Parental Stress Model, this study aims to understand how parents’ perceived impact of COVID-19 increased harsh parenting and reduced parent-child relationship closeness through the mediating effects of parenting stress. We collected data from 258 parents living in Singapore using online surveys disseminated through Facebook and community organizations. Our predictor was the perceived impact of COVID-19. Parental stress (mediator) was measured with the Parental Stress Scale. Two outcomes were used: parent-child relationship closeness and harsh parenting (spanking, yelling). Using mediation analysis in the SEM framework, we tested the indirect effects using bias-corrected bootstrap confidence intervals. Our results indicated that parenting stress was a significant mediator in the relationship between the perceived impact of COVID-19 and (a) parent-child closeness (indirect effect = −.30, Bootstrap 99% CI[−.59, −.11]) and (b) harsh parenting (indirect effect =.58, Bootstrap 99% CI[.25,.94]). The impact of COVID-19 and stay-home orders can increase parenting stress. This, in turn, has a negative impact on parenting by affecting parents’ relationship with their children and increasing the use of harsh parenting. Given that these are risk factors for potential child abuse, supporting parents and mitigating the impact of COVID-19 are important. | Source Title: | JOURNAL OF FAMILY VIOLENCE | URI: | https://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/245467 | ISSN: | 0885-7482 1573-2851 |
Appears in Collections: | Staff Publications Elements |
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