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- There is a significant positive correlation between maternal childhood trauma and maternal depression, as well as between maternal childhood trauma and children’s problem behaviors.
- Maternal childhood trauma directly impacts children’s problem behaviors and can also indirectly influence children’s problem behaviors through maternal depression.
- Using the Johnson-Neyman method, researchers determined that the prediction of children's problem behaviors by maternal childhood trauma is significant when the value of mindful parenting is less than 0.383 or greater than 0.948, and not significant when the value is between 0.383 and 0.948.
- Maternal childhood trauma has a positive predictive effect on children’s problem behaviors, which supports the Intergenerational Trauma Transmission (ITT) theory.
- The study titled 'The Impact of Maternal Childhood Trauma on Children's Problem Behaviors' explores the impact of maternal childhood trauma on children’s problem behaviors, examining the mediating role of maternal depression and the moderating role of mindfulness parenting, based on the Intergenerational Trauma Transmission theory.
- Mindful parenting moderates the effects of maternal childhood trauma and maternal depression on children’s problem behaviors, with high levels of mindful parenting mitigating these adverse effects.
- In a study of 385 participants, maternal childhood trauma significantly positively predicts maternal depression (β = 0.298, p < 0.001) and children's problem behaviors (β = 0.331, p < 0.001).
- When mindful parenting levels are low, maternal childhood trauma significantly predicts an increase in children's problem behaviors; however, when mindful parenting levels are high, this predictive effect is not significant.
- Maternal childhood trauma often leads to excessive emotional reactions or negative emotional transmission when mothers deal with children’s problem behaviors.
- Depression partially mediates the relationship between maternal childhood trauma and children’s problem behaviors.
- The study titled 'The Impact of Maternal Childhood Trauma on Children's Problem Behaviors' explores how maternal childhood trauma affects children's problem behaviors, specifically examining depression as a mediator and mindful parenting as a moderator.
- The interaction term between maternal childhood trauma and mindful parenting significantly negatively predicts children’s problem behaviors (β = −0.118, p < 0.001).
- Maternal depression mediates the relationship between maternal childhood trauma and children’s problem behaviors, as indicated by a 95% confidence interval of [0.071, 0.117] which does not include zero.
- Mindful parenting acts as a moderating variable that significantly weakens the pathway through which maternal childhood trauma influences children’s problem behaviors via maternal depression.
- The study found that depression mediates the relationship between maternal childhood trauma and children's problem behaviors, while mindful parenting moderates the impact of both maternal childhood trauma and depression on children's behavior.
- Mindful parenting acts as a moderator in the relationship between maternal childhood trauma, maternal depression, and children's problem behaviors, as established by SPSS PROCESS Model 15 analysis.
- Future research on the impact of maternal childhood trauma on children's problem behaviors should incorporate diverse methodologies, such as observational methods, teacher reports, and interviews, to obtain more objective data.
- Mindful parenting moderates the impact of maternal childhood trauma on children’s problem behaviors and also moderates the impact of maternal depression on children’s problem behaviors.
- Mindful parenting significantly moderates the effects of maternal childhood trauma and maternal depression on children’s problem behaviors.
- The study titled 'The Impact of Maternal Childhood Trauma on Children's Problem Behaviors' validates the theory of intergenerational transmission of trauma by demonstrating that maternal childhood trauma influences children’s problem behaviors through the mediating variable of maternal depression.
- Maternal childhood trauma positively predicts children’s problem behaviors.
- The study investigates whether maternal depression mediates the relationship between maternal childhood trauma and child problem behaviors, whether mindful parenting moderates the relationship between maternal childhood trauma and child problem behaviors, and whether mindful parenting moderates the relationship between maternal depression and children’s problem behaviors.
- In the high mindful parenting group, maternal childhood trauma did not significantly predict children’s problem behaviors (simple slope = −0.008, p > 0.05).
- Maternal depression mediates the relationship between maternal childhood trauma and children’s problem behaviors.
Facts (24)
Sources
The Impact of Maternal Childhood Trauma on Children's Problem ... dovepress.com 24 facts
claimThere is a significant positive correlation between maternal childhood trauma and maternal depression, as well as between maternal childhood trauma and children’s problem behaviors.
claimMaternal childhood trauma directly impacts children’s problem behaviors and can also indirectly influence children’s problem behaviors through maternal depression.
measurementUsing the Johnson-Neyman method, researchers determined that the prediction of children's problem behaviors by maternal childhood trauma is significant when the value of mindful parenting is less than 0.383 or greater than 0.948, and not significant when the value is between 0.383 and 0.948.
claimMaternal childhood trauma has a positive predictive effect on children’s problem behaviors, which supports the Intergenerational Trauma Transmission (ITT) theory.
claimThe study titled 'The Impact of Maternal Childhood Trauma on Children's Problem Behaviors' explores the impact of maternal childhood trauma on children’s problem behaviors, examining the mediating role of maternal depression and the moderating role of mindfulness parenting, based on the Intergenerational Trauma Transmission theory.
claimMindful parenting moderates the effects of maternal childhood trauma and maternal depression on children’s problem behaviors, with high levels of mindful parenting mitigating these adverse effects.
measurementIn a study of 385 participants, maternal childhood trauma significantly positively predicts maternal depression (β = 0.298, p < 0.001) and children's problem behaviors (β = 0.331, p < 0.001).
claimWhen mindful parenting levels are low, maternal childhood trauma significantly predicts an increase in children's problem behaviors; however, when mindful parenting levels are high, this predictive effect is not significant.
claimMaternal childhood trauma often leads to excessive emotional reactions or negative emotional transmission when mothers deal with children’s problem behaviors.
claimDepression partially mediates the relationship between maternal childhood trauma and children’s problem behaviors.
referenceThe study titled 'The Impact of Maternal Childhood Trauma on Children's Problem Behaviors' explores how maternal childhood trauma affects children's problem behaviors, specifically examining depression as a mediator and mindful parenting as a moderator.
measurementThe interaction term between maternal childhood trauma and mindful parenting significantly negatively predicts children’s problem behaviors (β = −0.118, p < 0.001).
claimMaternal depression mediates the relationship between maternal childhood trauma and children’s problem behaviors, as indicated by a 95% confidence interval of [0.071, 0.117] which does not include zero.
claimMindful parenting acts as a moderating variable that significantly weakens the pathway through which maternal childhood trauma influences children’s problem behaviors via maternal depression.
claimThe study found that depression mediates the relationship between maternal childhood trauma and children's problem behaviors, while mindful parenting moderates the impact of both maternal childhood trauma and depression on children's behavior.
claimMindful parenting acts as a moderator in the relationship between maternal childhood trauma, maternal depression, and children's problem behaviors, as established by SPSS PROCESS Model 15 analysis.
perspectiveFuture research on the impact of maternal childhood trauma on children's problem behaviors should incorporate diverse methodologies, such as observational methods, teacher reports, and interviews, to obtain more objective data.
claimMindful parenting moderates the impact of maternal childhood trauma on children’s problem behaviors and also moderates the impact of maternal depression on children’s problem behaviors.
claimMindful parenting significantly moderates the effects of maternal childhood trauma and maternal depression on children’s problem behaviors.
claimThe study titled 'The Impact of Maternal Childhood Trauma on Children's Problem Behaviors' validates the theory of intergenerational transmission of trauma by demonstrating that maternal childhood trauma influences children’s problem behaviors through the mediating variable of maternal depression.
claimMaternal childhood trauma positively predicts children’s problem behaviors.
claimThe study investigates whether maternal depression mediates the relationship between maternal childhood trauma and child problem behaviors, whether mindful parenting moderates the relationship between maternal childhood trauma and child problem behaviors, and whether mindful parenting moderates the relationship between maternal depression and children’s problem behaviors.
measurementIn the high mindful parenting group, maternal childhood trauma did not significantly predict children’s problem behaviors (simple slope = −0.008, p > 0.05).
claimMaternal depression mediates the relationship between maternal childhood trauma and children’s problem behaviors.