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Articles

Early parenting, represented family relationships, and externalizing behavior problems in children born preterm

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Pages 271-291 | Received 30 May 2013, Accepted 14 Jan 2014, Published online: 28 Feb 2014
 

Abstract

Through assessment of 173 preterm infants and their mothers at hospital discharge and at 9, 16, 24, 36, and 72 months, the study examined early parenting, attachment security, effortful control, and children’s representations of family relationships in relation to subsequent externalizing behavior problems. Less intrusive early parenting predicted more secure attachment, better effortful control skills, and fewer early behavior problems, although it did not directly relate to the structural or content characteristics of children’s represented family relationships. Children with higher effortful control scores at 24 months had more coherent family representations at 36 months. Moreover, children who exhibited less avoidance in their family representations at 36 months had fewer mother-reported externalizing behavior problems at 72 months. The study suggests that early parenting quality and avoidance in children’s represented relationships are important for the development of externalizing behavior problems in children born preterm.

Acknowledgements

Special thanks to the children and families who generously gave of their time to participate in this study.

Funding

This research was supported by grants from the National Institutes of Health [R01HD44163, P30HD03352] and the University of Wisconsin.

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