Maternal depression and its relationship to life stress, perceptions of child behavior problems, parenting behaviors, and child conduct problems
- PMID: 3403812
- DOI: 10.1007/BF00913802
Maternal depression and its relationship to life stress, perceptions of child behavior problems, parenting behaviors, and child conduct problems
Abstract
This study examined the relationship of reported maternal depression to prior and current life stressors, and to mother perceptions of child adjustment, parenting behaviors, and child conduct problems. Forty-six depressed mothers and 49 nondepressed mothers and their clinic-referred children (aged 3-8 years) participated. Depressed mothers were more critical than nondepressed mothers, but the behavior of children of depressed and nondepressed mothers showed no significant differences. Depressed mothers were more likely to have experience child abuse, spouse abuse, or more negative life events than nondepressed mothers. Maternal reports of stress related to mother characteristics and to negative life events were the most potent variables discriminating depressed from nondepressed mother families.
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