Parents
Parenting stress and Child Maltreatment: The Buffering Effect of Neighborhood Social Service Availability and Accessibility
The current study examines the relationship between aspects of social service availability and child maltreatment. Specifically, the study uses negative binomial regression to estimate whether service availability, accessibility, and receipt are associated with physical child abuse and neglect.
Child Maltreatment and Risk Patterns Among Participants in a Child Abuse Prevention Program
The relationship between risk factors and Child Protective Services (CPS) outcomes in families who participate in home visiting programs to prevent abuse and neglect and who are reported to CPS is largely unknown.
Is Narcissism Associated with Child Physical Abuse Risk?
The present study was designed to clarify the associations between covert narcissism, overt narcissism, negative affect, and child physical abuse (CPA) risk.
A Randomized Controlled Trial of Family Transitions Triple P: A Group-Administered Parenting Program to Minimize the Adverse Effects of Parental Divorce on Children
This randomized controlled trial evaluated the efficacy of Family Transitions Triple P (FTTP), a 12 session group-delivered positive parenting program designed to prevent adverse outcomes for children following parental divorce.
PTSD as a Moderator of a Parenting Intervention for Military Families
The stress of multiple deployments and exposure to combat places service members at risk for posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), which may detrimentally affect parenting.
PTSD as a Moderator of a Parenting Intervention for Military Families
Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) can be a concern for Service members and their families. This study considered the impact of PTSD on the effectiveness of a 14-week parenting intervention for Service members and their spouses.
Parent-to-Child Physical Aggression, Neighborhood Cohesion, and Development of Children's Internalizing and Externalizing
Taking a risk and resilience approach, this study examined (1) whether child age moderates the association between exposure to parent–child physical aggression (PCPA) and initial levels and growth in internalizing and externalizing problems, and (2) whether neighborhood social cohesion is a prote