Mother-child emotion dialogues in families exposed to interparental violence
Publication date
2016-04-01
Editors
Advisors
Supervisors
Document Type
Article
Metadata
Show full item recordCollections
License
Abstract
This cross-sectional study examined the hypothesis that parent–child emotion dialogues among interparental violence (IPV) exposed dyads (n = 30; 4–12 years) show less quality than dialogues among nonexposed dyads (n = 30; 4–12 years). Second, we examined whether parental posttraumatic stress symptoms and parental adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) were associated with the quality of the dialogues. As expected, in the IPV-exposed group, quality of mother-child emotion dialogues was of lesser quality; dyads often showed a lack of elaboration in their dialogue; mothers showed less sensitive guidance; and children showed less cooperation and exploration, compared to dialogues, dyads, mothers, and children in the nonexposed group. Although maternal posttraumatic stress symptoms and maternal history of ACEs were significantly higher in the IPV-exposed families than in the nonexposed families, these variables were not associated with the quality of emotion dialogues. Clinical implications and study limitations are discussed.
Keywords
Child maltreatment, domestic violence, parent-child emotion dialogues, parent-child relationship, parental posttraumatic stress, Health(social science), Life-span and Life-course Studies, Sociology and Political Science, Law, SDG 5 - Gender Equality, SDG 16 - Peace, Justice and Strong Institutions
Citation
Visser, M, Overbeek, M M, De Schipper, J C, Schoemaker, K, Lamers-Winkelman, F & Finkenauer, C 2016, 'Mother-child emotion dialogues in families exposed to interparental violence', Journal of Child Custody, vol. 13, no. 2-3, pp. 178-198. https://doi.org/10.1080/15379418.2016.1153442