Investigating Parental Factors for Adolescent Problematic Gaming and Social Media Use - A Cross-sectional and Longitudinal Approach

被引:1
|
作者
Philippi, Johanna [1 ]
Simon-Kutscher, Kathrin [1 ]
Austermann, Maria Isabella [1 ]
Thomasius, Rainer [1 ]
Paschke, Kerstin [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Med Ctr Hamburg Eppendorf UKE, German Ctr Addict Res Childhood & Adolescence DZSK, Martinistr 52, D-20246 Hamburg, Germany
关键词
Digital parental self-efficacy; Digital role modeling; Gaming disorder; Problematic digital-media use; Social-media use disorder; INTERNET; DISORDER;
D O I
10.1016/j.jadohealth.2024.06.012
中图分类号
B844 [发展心理学(人类心理学)];
学科分类号
040202 ;
摘要
Purpose: Increasing concern has been raised on the addictive potential of digital games and socialmedia platforms, especially in adolescent users. Hence, investigating the etiology of problematic gaming (PG) and problematic social-media use (PSMU) is of great scientific and clinical interest. Parental factors have not been sufficiently addressed yet. Therefore, this study aims to investigate the predictive values of parental demographic, psychological, parenting, and role model factors for adolescent PG/PSMU. Methods: In a representative parent-child (10-17 years) sample parental factors and adolescent PG/PSMU were assessed cross-sectionally (N dyads = 1221) and longitudinally (N dyads = 659) using online-questionnaires at two measurement points 14 months apart. Parental factors included parental media-use patterns, sociodemographic aspects, (digital) emotion regulation, stress perception, (digital) parental self-efficacy, and media rules. Best subset linear regression models were estimated to identify parental factors with greatest predictive values. These were included in prospective linear regression analyses. Results: At the cross-sectional level, 18% of model variance predicting PG and 24% predicting PSMU could be explained by parental media-use patterns, media rules, and (digital) parental self-efficacy after controlling for adolescent age. Longitudinally, 33% of variance in the PG model and 34% of variance of the PSMU model could be explained by parental media-use patterns and parental self- efficacy after controlling for adolescent age and baseline PG/PSMU. Discussion: This study is the first to differentially investigate parental factors in the context of adolescent PG/PSMU in a prospective representative parent-child study. Aspects of digital parental role modeling and parenting could be identified as promising anchors for prevention and treatment.
引用
收藏
页码:626 / 634
页数:9
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