What parents don't know and how it may affect their children:: Qualifying the disclosure-adjustment link

Publication date

2010-04

Authors

Frijns, TomISNI 0000000387286648
Keijsers, LoesISNI 0000000389315975
Branje, SusanORCID 0000-0002-9999-5313ISNI 0000000112866969
Meeus, WimISNI 0000000034127027

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
Open Access logo

License

Abstract

Recent research has identified adolescent disclosure to parents as a powerful predictor of adolescent adjustment. We propose, however, that the common operationalization of adolescent disclosure incorporates the two separate constructs of disclosure and secrecy, and predicted that the disclosure–adjustment link can largely be explained by the unique contribution of secrecy from parents. A four-wave survey study among 309 adolescents tested these predictions. Factor analyses confirmed that disclosure and secrecy should be distinguished as two separate constructs. Moreover, in cross-lagged path analyses, only secrecy was a longitudinal predictor of adolescent internalizing (i.e., depression) and externalizing (i.e., delinquency) problems, disclosure was not. Secrecy consistently contributed to the longitudinal prediction of delinquency from early to middle adolescence, whereas it contributed to the prediction of depression only in early adolescence. Findings thus attest the importance of distinguishing between disclosure and secrecy and suggest that the disclosure–adjustment link may actually reflect a secrecy-maladjustment link.

Keywords

Secrecy, Disclosure, Adolescent–parent relationship, Adolescent adjustment, Taverne, International (English)

Citation

Frijns, T, Keijsers, L, Branje, S J T & Meeus, W H J 2010, 'What parents don't know and how it may affect their children: Qualifying the disclosure-adjustment link', Journal of Adolescence, vol. 33, no. 2, pp. 261-270. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.adolescence.2009.05.010