Tests of the Mitigating Effects of Caring and Supportive Relationships in the Study of Abusive Disciplining Over Two Generations

Date

2013

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Journal of Adolescent Health

Abstract

Purpose: To examine evidence of the continuity in abusive discipline across two generations (G1 and G2) and the role of Safe, Stable, and Nurturing Relationships (SSNRs) as protective factors. Methods: Data are from the Lehigh Longitudinal Study, a prospective investigation of the causes and consequences child maltreatment that began in the 1970s with a sample of 457 children and their parents. Data were most recently collected in 2008 - 2010 from 80% of the original child sample (N = 357) when they were adults age 36 years on average. Of those assessed as adults, 268 participants (G2s) were parenting children and thus comprise the analysis sample. Analyses examined the association between physical discipline practices by G1 parents and G2’s reports of similarly severe discipline practices used in parenting their own children. Analyses also investigated the direct and interactive (protective) effects of SSNR variables that pertain to the care, warmth, and support children received from their mothers, fathers, and siblings over their lifetimes. A measure of an adult partner’s warmth and support was also included. A case-level examination of G2 harsh discipliners was included to examine other forms of past and more recent forms of abuse exposure. Results: Results show a significant predictive association between physical discipline by G1 and G2 parents (Beta = .30, p < .05, OR: 1.14 [1.04 - 1.26]), after accounting for childhood socioeconomic status and gender. While being physically disciplined as a child was inversely related to reports of having had a caring relationship with one’s mother (r = -.25, p < .01), only care and support from one’s father predicted a lower risk of harsh physical discipline by G2s (Beta = -.24, p < .05, OR: .74 [.59 -.92]). None of the SSNR variables moderated the effect of G1 discipline on G2 discipline. A case-level examination of the abusive histories of G2 harsh discipliners found they had in some cases been exposed to physical and emotional abuse by multiple caregivers and by adult partners. Conclusions: There is continuity in physical disciplining across two generations. SSNRs, while requiring further examination, did not mediate or moderate the effect of G1 on G2 harsh physical discipline. Care and support from fathers was inversely related to the likelihood of G2 harsh physical discipline, although this relationship is independent of abuse in childhood. Research is needed to identify factors that interrupt the continuity of abuse in two or more generations so that promising interventions can be implemented. (Author Abstract)

Description

Keywords

child abuse, research, intergenerational abuse, corporal punishment, physical abuse, emotional abuse

Citation

Herrenkohl, T. I., Klika, J. B., Brown, E. C., Herrenkohl, R. C., & Leeb, R. T. (2013). Tests of the mitigating effects of caring and supportive relationships in the study of abusive disciplining over two generations. Journal of Adolescent Health, 53(4), S18-S24.

DOI