Abstract
Hurricane Katrina dramatically altered the level of social and environmental stressors for the residents of the New Orleans area. The Family Stress Model describes a process whereby felt financial strain undermines parents' mental health, the quality of family relationships, and child adjustment. Our study considered the extent to which the Family Stress Model explained toddler-aged adjustment among Hurricane Katrina affected and nonaffected families. Two groups of very low-income mothers and their 2-year-old children participated (pre-Katrina, n = 55; post-Katrina, n = 47). Consistent with the Family Stress Model, financial strain and neighborhood violence were associated with higher levels of mothers' depressed mood; depressed mood was linked to less parenting efficacy. Poor parenting efficacy was associated to more child internalizing and externalizing problems.
This research was supported by grants from the National Institutes of Mental Health (R01-MH73857), National Science Foundation (0446759), and from the Entergy Charitable Contributions awarded to Laura V. Scaramella (PI). Special thanks to Shantice D. Hawkins, Carmen M. Culotta, Nabila E. Ford, Amy S. Lapointe, Danielle F. Wood, Sarah D. Robison, James Evans, Elaine O'Conner, and Pearlie Elloie for assistance with recruitment and data collection. We especially thank the families and Head Start center staff in Orleans and Jefferson Parishes who participated in this study.
Notes
a n = 55; b n = 47.
† p < .10; ∗p < .05.
∗p < .01.
†p < .10; ∗p < .05; ∗∗p < .01.