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Profiles of Parenting Behaviors: Associations with Adolescents’ Problematic Outcomes

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Abstract

Research has consistently found evidence for four parenting styles that vary along the dimensions of warmth/responsiveness and control/demandingness. Although these parenting styles have important implications for youth development, less research has explored how parents of adolescents vary in their use of subtypes of warmth and control, as well as negative aspects of parenting. The current study utilized a person-centered approach to examine adolescents’ report of their parents’ engagement in six behaviors (i.e., rules, solicitation, psychological control, problem communication, open communication, warmth). Additionally, the current study examined whether profiles of perceived parenting behaviors are differentially associated with adolescents’ substance use, risky cyber behaviors, over-eating behaviors, under-eating behaviors, and depressive symptoms. Data were collected from 161 adolescents in the US (Mage = 14.42, SD = 1.73, range = 12–18; 80.7% Caucasian; 59.6% female) who completed questionnaires regarding parenting behaviors and problematic outcomes. Latent profile analyses indicated that adolescents perceived their parents as displaying five unique profiles of parenting behaviors (i.e., Problematic, Controlling, Inconsistent, Warm and Open, Authoritative), which were uniquely associated with adolescents’ problematic outcomes. Findings urge researchers to consider how multiple aspects of parental warmth/responsiveness and control/demandingness along with negative parenting behaviors co-occur among parents of adolescents and differentially relate to developmental outcomes. When examining adolescents’ perceived parenting profiles using a wider range of parenting behaviors, findings suggest that parenting styles are more nuanced than previous research has suggested. Further, these nuanced profiles have important implications for adolescents’ problematic outcomes.

Highlights

  • Adolescents perceived their parents as varying in their combinations of parenting behaviors, including rules, solicitation, psychological control, problem communication, open communication, and warmth

  • Five profiles of perceived parenting behaviors emerged (i.e., Problematic, Controlling, Inconsistent, Warm and Open, Authoritative)

  • These five profiles of parenting behaviors were differentially associated with adolescents’ substance use, risky cyber behaviors, problematic eating behaviors, and depressive symptoms

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Funding

This research was supported via internal funding through West Virginia University.

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Correspondence to Katelyn F. Romm.

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The authors declare no competing interests.

Ethical Approval

The current study was approved by the Institutional Review Board for West Virginia University.

Informed Consent

Informed consent was obtained from all individual participants included in the study. All participating youth gave informed consent prior to their participation. In addition, parental permission and consent was obtained from the parents of all youth under 18 years of age.

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Romm, K.F., Metzger, A. Profiles of Parenting Behaviors: Associations with Adolescents’ Problematic Outcomes. J Child Fam Stud 30, 941–954 (2021). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10826-021-01920-8

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10826-021-01920-8

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