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Paternal autonomy restriction,neighborhood safety,and child anxiety trajectory in community youth
Authors:Christine E. Cooper-Vince  Priscilla T. Chan  Donna B. Pincus  Jonathan S. Comer
Affiliation:1. Department of Psychology, Boston University, United States;2. Department of Psychology, Florida International University, United States
Abstract:Intrusive parenting, primarily examined among middle to upper-middle class mothers, has been positively associated with the presence and severity of anxiety in children. This study employed cross-sectional linear regression and longitudinal latent growth curve analyses to evaluate the main and interactive effects of early childhood paternal autonomy restriction (AR) and neighborhood safety (NS) on the trajectory of child anxiety in a sample of 596 community children and fathers from the NICHD SECYD. Longitudinal analyses revealed that greater paternal AR at age 6 was actually associated with greater decreases in child anxiety in later childhood. Cross-sectional analyses revealed main effects for NS across childhood, and interactive effects of paternal AR and NS that were present only in early childhood, whereby children living in safer neighborhoods demonstrated increased anxiety when experiencing lower levels of paternal AR. Findings further clarify for whom and when paternal AR impacts child anxiety in community youth.
Keywords:Child anxiety   Father   Autonomy   Neighborhood safety   Latent growth modeling
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