Maternal and Paternal Predictors of Child Depressive Symptoms: An Actor-Partner Interdependence Framework

J Child Fam Stud. 2018 Feb;27(2):559-568. doi: 10.1007/s10826-017-0910-6. Epub 2017 Oct 16.

Abstract

Family members are theorized to influence each other via transactional or systems related processes; however, the literature is limited given its focus on mother-child relationships and the utilization of statistical approaches that do not model interdependence within family members. The current study evaluated associations between self-reported parental affect, parenting behavior, and child depressive symptoms among 103 mother-father-child triads. Children ranged in age from 8 to 12 years. Higher maternal negative affect was associated with greater maternal and paternal harsh/negative parenting behavior. While maternal negative affect was directly associated with child depressive symptoms, paternal negative affect was indirectly associated with child depressive symptoms via paternal harsh/negative behavior. In a separate model, maternal positive affect was indirectly associated with child depressive symptoms via maternal supportive/positive behavior. These results highlight the importance of simultaneously modeling maternal and paternal characteristics as predictors of child depressive symptoms.

Keywords: affect/emotion; development; family process; parent-child relations; triadic data.