The Role of Parents, Parenting and the Family Environment in Children’s Post-Disaster Mental Health

被引:0
|
作者
Vanessa E. Cobham
Brett McDermott
Divna Haslam
Matthew R. Sanders
机构
[1] University of Queensland,School of Psychology
[2] James Cook University,Parenting and Family Support Centre
[3] University of Queensland,Mater Research Institute
[4] University of Queensland,undefined
来源
Current Psychiatry Reports | 2016年 / 18卷
关键词
Disaster; Children; Parenting; Family environment; Mental health;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
There is widespread support for the hypothesis that, post-disaster, children’s mental health is impacted—at least in part—via the impact on parents, parenting, parent-child interactions, and the family environment. To some degree, the enthusiasm with which this hypothesis is held outstrips the evidence examining it. The current paper critically evaluates the empirical evidence for this hypothesis and concludes that although limited (both in terms of number of existing studies and methodological flaws), the extant literature indicates some parent-related variables, as well as some aspects of the family environment are likely to constitute risk or protective factors for children. Given that parenting is modifiable, it is proposed that the identified parent- and family-related factors represent important therapeutic targets, and a universal post-disaster parenting intervention (Disaster Recovery Triple P) is described.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] The Role of Parents, Parenting and the Family Environment in Children's Post-Disaster Mental Health
    Cobham, Vanessa E.
    McDermott, Brett
    Haslam, Divna
    Sanders, Matthew R.
    CURRENT PSYCHIATRY REPORTS, 2016, 18 (06)
  • [2] Mental Health Needs in a Post-Disaster Environment
    Milligan, Gary
    McGuinness, Teena M.
    JOURNAL OF PSYCHOSOCIAL NURSING AND MENTAL HEALTH SERVICES, 2009, 47 (09) : 23 - 30
  • [3] Mental health needs post-disaster: Supporting recovery of children and families
    Macdonald, Elspeth
    AUSTRALIAN OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY JOURNAL, 2009, 56 (02) : 79 - 80
  • [4] Post-disaster mental health care in Japan
    Kim, Yoshiharu
    Akiyama, Tsuyoshi
    LANCET, 2011, 378 (9788): : 317 - 318
  • [5] Social capital and post-disaster mental health
    Wind, Tim R.
    Fordham, Maureen
    Komproe, Ivan H.
    GLOBAL HEALTH ACTION, 2011, 4
  • [6] Predicting Participation in a Post-disaster Mental Health Program
    Crompton, David
    Kohleis, Peter
    Shakespeare-Finch, Jane
    Gerald, Gerard Fitz
    Young, Ross
    DISASTER MEDICINE AND PUBLIC HEALTH PREPAREDNESS, 2024, 18
  • [7] Effectiveness of a parenting support to Somali parents on children's mental health
    Osman, Fatumo
    Flacking, R.
    Schon, U-K
    Klingberg-Allvin, M.
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH, 2016, 26
  • [8] Why Family Communication Matters: the Role of Co-rumination and Topic Avoidance in Understanding Post-Disaster Mental Health
    Felix, Erika D.
    Afifi, Tamara D.
    Horan, Sean M.
    Meskunas, Haley
    Garber, Adam
    JOURNAL OF ABNORMAL CHILD PSYCHOLOGY, 2020, 48 (11) : 1511 - 1524
  • [9] Why Family Communication Matters: the Role of Co-rumination and Topic Avoidance in Understanding Post-Disaster Mental Health
    Erika D. Felix
    Tamara D. Afifi
    Sean M. Horan
    Haley Meskunas
    Adam Garber
    Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology, 2020, 48 : 1511 - 1524
  • [10] Australian parents’ work–family conflict: accumulated effects on children’s family environment and mental health
    Liana S. Leach
    Huong Dinh
    Amanda Cooklin
    Jan M. Nicholson
    Lyndall Strazdins
    Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology, 2021, 56 : 571 - 581