Mexican-origin parents’ stress and satisfaction: The role of emotional support

Citation

Popp, T. K.; Delgado, M. Y.; & Wheeler, Lorey A. (2019). Mexican-origin parents' stress and satisfaction: The role of emotional support. Family Process. vol. 58 (1) pp. 146-164

Abstract

Guided by a process model of parenting and the integrative model, this study examined sources of emotional support (i.e., partner, maternal, paternal) as related to stress and satisfaction resulting from the parenting role in a sample of Mexican-origin young adult parents who participated in the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health (Add Health) during Wave IV. Participants were male and female parents (26-35 years of age; 59% female; N = 737) who had children and a partner. Results from structural equation modeling revealed support from mothers as salient; high levels of maternal support were associated with high levels of parenting satisfaction. Tests of indirect effects suggested that parenting satisfaction played an intervening role in the link between maternal support and parenting stress. The pattern of results held across levels of linguistic acculturation but varied by gender. Understanding the mechanisms that predict parenting stress and satisfaction within the Mexican-origin population may help in the identification of culturally sensitive intervention strategies.

URL

https://doi.org/10.1111/famp.12342

Keyword(s)

Mexican-origin families Parenting satisfaction Parenting stress Social support apoyo social estres por la crianza familias de origen mexicano satisfaccion en la crianza

Reference Type

Journal Article

Journal Title

Family Process

Author(s)

Popp, T. K.
Delgado, M. Y.
Wheeler, Lorey A.

Year Published

2019

Volume Number

58

Issue Number

1

Pages

146-164

Edition

January 25, 2018

DOI

10.1111/famp.12342

Reference ID

7366