Who Cares for Caregivers? Evidence-Based Approaches to Family Support
Currently, more than one in 10 Americans are caregivers, and projections suggest exponential increases in caregiving in the years ahead.
Currently, more than one in 10 Americans are caregivers, and projections suggest exponential increases in caregiving in the years ahead.
This bulletin describes state-of-the-art universal and selective prevention programs designed to promote parent and teacher competencies and to prevent conduct problems.
OBJECTIVE: To examine the use and predictors of different discipline practices by parents of very young children using data from the 2000 National Survey of Early Childhood Health (NSECH).
It is generally argued that parental use of specific discipline techniques (e.g., reasoning vs power assertion) differentially affects a child's internalization. This article offers an expanded formulation.
This study examined the associations of 11 discipline techniques with children’s aggressive and anxious behaviors in an international sample of mothers and children from 6 countries and determined whether an
Although support for corporal punishment of children remains widespread in the United States, there is a substantial body of research from psychology and its allied disciplines indicating corporal punishment
Although the merits of parents using corporal punishment to discipline children have been argued for decades, a thorough understanding of whether and how corporal punishment affects children has not been rea
Military deployments and duty-related separations are defining experiences for military service members and their families.
The trends discussed above are likely to continue. The American active-duty armed forces are unlikely to grow larger and are probably going to get smaller.
Work-related-parental-absence is becoming more common in our society, however the literature has not kept pace with this growing trend.