1.A Comparative Study On Perinatal And Early Child Rearing Alertness Between Korean And U.S Mothers.
Shinae YOO ; Chang Il AHN ; Kyoul Ja CHO
Journal of the Korean Pediatric Society 1983;26(3):247-256
No abstract available.
Child
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Child Rearing*
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Child*
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Humans
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Mothers*
2.Influence of Parents' Rearing Attitudes Perceived by Bullied Children on Bullying: Ego-Resilience Mediation.
Journal of Korean Academy of Community Health Nursing 2013;24(2):214-224
PURPOSE: This study was conducted to examine effects of parents' rearing attitudes perceived by bullied children. The focus in this study was on mediating effects of ego-resilience. METHODS: Data were collected from 202 bullied elementary school students in grade years 5 and 6. The data were analyzed by using descriptive statistics, correlation analysis and structural analysis with the SPSS/WIN 19.0 program and Amos 19.0. RESULTS: First, significant positive relations between parents' rearing attitudes and ego-resilience, significant negative relations between ego-resilience and bullying, and between parents' rearing attitude and bullying were found. Second, the effects of ego-resilience as a mediator between perceived parents' rearing attitudes and bullying were significant statistically. CONCLUSION: The findings suggest that educational programs for parents are needed to improve parents' perception of the importance of their rearing attitudes toward bullying and nursing intervention programs for bullied children should be developed to increase their ego-resilience.
Bullying
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Child
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Child Rearing
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Humans
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Negotiating
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Parents
3.Effects of Perception of Marital Conflict and Child Rearing Attitude on Child Abuse and Emotional Maladjustment Behavior in Children.
Journal of Korean Academy of Child Health Nursing 2011;17(1):22-30
PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to examine the effects of the perception of marital conflict and child rearing attitudes on abuse experience and emotional maladjustment behavior in children. METHODS: Data were collected from May 25 to June 5, 2009. A questionnaire survey was used with 320 elementary school students. Data were analyzed using Pearson correlation coefficients and multiple regression analysis. RESULTS: For effects of perception of marital conflict and child rearing attitude on abuse experience among these children, authoritarian controlling disposition, affectionate disposition and marital conflict had a significant impact on their overall abuse experience. These variables were predictors of child abuse and accounted for 30.6% of the variance. For effects of perception of marital conflict, child rearing attitude and abuse experience on emotional maladjustment behavior among children, there was a significant influence for marital conflict, neglect, emotional abuse and authoritarian controlling disposition. These variables were predictors of emotional maladjustment behavior and accounted for 21.5% of the variance. CONCLUSION: The results indicate that marital conflict and child rearing attitude are two major variables affecting children's abuse experience and emotional maladjustment behavior.
Child
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Child Abuse
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Child Behavior
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Child Rearing
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Family Conflict
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Humans
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Child Health
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Surveys and Questionnaires
4.Perception of Parental Role by University Students.
Korean Journal of Child Health Nursing 2004;10(4):413-422
PURPOSE: This study was conducted to describe the perception of parental role held by university students and to examine difference in perception of parental role according to student characteristics. METHOD: The participant were 338 university student in Gangreung city. The instrument was developed by researcher and consisted of 4 subcategories ; child rearing environment, parental sensitivity, growth and development of infant, and physical care. Data were collected from May 10 to June 1 in 2004 and were analyzed using SPSS Win 10.0 program. RESULT: The university students' perception of total parental role had a mean item score of 4.02, with 4.12 for parental sensitivity, 4.00 for child rearing environment, 4.00 for physical care and 3.95 for growth and development. There were significant differences in perception of parental role according to sex(t=-5.55, p=.00), grade(F=13.12, p=.00), type of college(F=28.34, p=.00), father's age(F=5.01, p=.00), father's education(F=5.01, p=.00), mother's education(F=3.33, p=.03) student's marriage plan(t=2.37, p=.01) main caretaker(F=9.53, p=.00) person who lived with student in childhood(F=3.62, p=.01) and student's perception of the need for education for parental role(t=3.74, p=.00). CONCLUSION: The impact of childhood experience has lifelong significance on subsequent health and development. Especially, the experience of childhood is highly affected by the quality of parental role. It is important to identify university student's perception of parental role as pre-parent preparation for parenting. Therefore, pre-parent education program are necessary.
Child
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Child Rearing
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Education
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Growth and Development
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Humans
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Infant
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Marriage
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Parenting
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Parents*
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Ritodrine
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Child Health
5.Content Analysis of Child Rearings of Mothers in Infant and Child Preschool.
Child Health Nursing Research 2014;20(1):39-48
PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to examine the parenting of mothers with infants and preschoolers in an effort to determine types of parenting. METHODS: The 32 participating mothers were interviewed and from the content of the interviews, their parenting was analyzed. Statements were categorized and analyzed according to the selected procedure. RESULTS: The parenting of mothers was classified into positive reinforcement and negative reinforcement, including 55 significant statements and 14 categories. Positive reinforcement was categorized as frequent skin contact, giving pleasure, spending a lot of time with children, improving children's self-esteem, being sensitive to children's needs, realistic discipline, developing independence, listening to children, and understanding and respecting children's feelings. Negative reinforcement was categorized as overprotection, inconsistent attitude, negligence, negative educational behavior, and emphasis on obedience. CONCLUSION: These results suggest that systematic education should be provided for mothers to increase their ability to provide good parenting. It is expected that the findings of this study would be useful in the development of efficient educational programs.
Child
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Child Rearing*
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Child*
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Education
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Humans
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Infant*
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Malpractice
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Mothers*
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Parenting
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Parents
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Pleasure
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Reinforcement (Psychology)
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Skin
6.A Predictive Model of Behavioral Problems in Elementary School Children.
Child Health Nursing Research 2014;20(1):1-10
PURPOSE: The purposes of the study were to develop and test a model which explains the relationship among factors affecting behavioral problems in elementary school children. METHODS: The participants for the study were 368 elementary school children and their mothers at 3 elementary schools in one city. Data analysis was done using the SPSS 17.0 program for t-test, -test, and ANOVA and the AMOS 17.0 program for theoretical model testing. RESULTS: The theoretical model showed a significant goodness of fit to the empirical data (Goodness of Fit Index: .96, Adjusted Goodness of Fit Index: .93 Comparative Fit Index: .95, Root Mean Square Error of Approximation: .06, Standardized Root Mean Square Residual: .02). Six paths were found to be statistically significant including from child rearing attitude to self-esteem, stress, stress coping and behavioral problems, and from self-esteem to stress and behavioral problems. Child rearing attitude showed a significant effect to behavioral problems by total effect. Self-esteem affected behavioral problems by total and direct effects. CONCLUSION: Child rearing attitude and self-esteem of children are important factors affecting behavioral problems in elementary school children.
Adaptation, Psychological
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Child Behavior
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Child Rearing
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Child*
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Humans
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Models, Theoretical
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Mothers
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Parenting
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Self Concept
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Statistics as Topic
7.Family factors in developmental delays in children under six years old.
Philippine Journal of Nursing 2013;83(1):4-14
Development delay in children under 6 years old is prevalent not only in both developed and developing countries. It is alarming that the number of delayed children is increasing. It is obliging to find out the family factors that possibly affect developmental delays in children six years old and younger. The objectives of the study were the following: (1) Describe the characteristics of families of children with developmental delays. (2) Determine the factors that significantly relate with developmental delays when comparing families of children, with delays and without delays.
The sample was composed of 52 delayed children and their families, and 52 normal children and their families who were purposively chosen. The data was collected from March to May 2011 with the approval of the Saint Louis University Research Ethics Committee. The Metro Manila Developmental Screening Test was used to test child development. The Parent Behavior Checklist was used to assess parenting behavior of mothers. A questionnaire was used to collect family and child factors.
The results of analysis revealed that higher frequencies of delays occurred in children one (23.08%) and three (23.08%) years of age; first born or only child (36.54%), and in households with three children or less (32.69%). Families of delayed children are of low socio-economic status, whose mother predominantly scored low in all categories of parenting. It was also found out that more frequencies of delays occurred in the fine motor adaptive sector (86.54%), followed by the language (69.23%), gross motor (38.46%) and personal-social (32.69%) sectors respectively.
Results of the chi square test revealed that expectation parenting behavior is significantly associated to developmental delay in the gross-motor sector (p 0.005) in children under six years of age. Developmental delays in the gross motor sector in the three to less than six-year-olds are significantly associated with father's occupation (p 0.009) and expectation parenting behavior (p 0.022).
Analysis of factors associated with developmental delays when comparing delayed and normal children revealed that family factors are not significantly associated with developmental delays. A sub-analysis of age groups however revealed that mother's occupation and developmental delays are significantly associated in the three to less that six-year-old age group (p 0.026).
It is concluded that children with developmental delays belong to families with disadvantaged socioeconomic status whose mothers scored low in all subscales of parenting behaviors; and family characteristics, parenting behaviors of the mother and child characteristics are not significantly related to developmental delays in children under six years old. Therefore, health workers should be more vigilant in identifying children with developmental delays regardless of family characteristics.
Human ; Male ; Female ; Child ; Child Preschool ; Infant ; Family ; Developmental Disabilities ; Parenting ; Child Rearing ; Social Class
8.Child Rearing Experiences of Foreign Wives Married to Korean Husbands.
Asian Nursing Research 2010;4(2):75-89
PURPOSE: This study was conducted to explore the child rearing experience and associated issues of foreign women married to Korean men. METHODS: Eleven foreign women married to Korean men were selected by a purposive and snowball sampling method. Data were collected during the period from May to August, 2007 by a semi-structured interview guide. Transcribed interview data were analyzed using Giorgi's step of phenomenological analysis. RESULTS: The findings revealed six major themes and relevant subthemes: (a) having motherhood, (b) struggling with obstacles, (c) getting lost, (d) finding ways, (e) harvesting; and (f) looking into the future. CONCLUSIONS: The participants were experiencing multiple acculturative stressors which negatively affected their capacity for rearing children. However, when they had appropriate support, they were able to achieve many successes. Moreover, they were self-directed and making their best efforts to realize their dreams. This study contributed to the limited knowledge on immigrant women's child rearing experiences. It supported the need for comprehensive community programs that meet a variety of needs for this population and the need for public education.
Acculturation
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Child
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Child Rearing
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Cultural Diversity
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Emigrants and Immigrants
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Female
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Humans
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Male
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Marriage
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Spouses
9.The Relationship between Depressive Tendency in Postpartum Women and Factors such as Infant Temperament, Parentiong Stress and Coping Style.
Seung Hwi LEE ; Seong Ill JEON ; Young Mee KIM ; Jung Ho LEE ; Young Min CHOI ; Gi Chul LEE
Journal of Korean Neuropsychiatric Association 1998;37(1):95-103
OBJECTIVES: This Study examined the relationship of depressive tendency in postpartum women with psychosocial factors such as infant temperament, parental stress and coping style. METHODS: The subjects consisted of 105 postpartum women, each of whom had an infant aged 4 to 12 months. They were assessed on demographic variables and on measures of the depressive symptomatology, infant temperament, parental stress and the coping style using Beck Depression Inventory(BDI), the EAS temperamental survey, Parenting Stress Index(PSI), the Way of Coping Checklist(WCC). And then we assessed the relationship of depressive tendency in postpartum women with psychosocial factors. RESULTS: The results were as follows: 1) Depressive tendency in postpartum women had significant relationship with emotionality(r=.26 p<0.05) and activity(r=.22 p<0.05) of infant temperament. 2) Depressive tendency in postpartum women had significant relationship with parenting stress(r=.44 p<0.001). 3) Depressive tendency in postpartum women had no significant relationship with coping style. 4) Parental stress had significant relationship with emotionality(r=.49 p<0.001) but did not have any relationship with sociability and activity of infant temperament. Parenting stress had no significant relationship with coping style. CONCLUSION: These results suggest that depressive tendency in postpartum women correlated with emotionality and activity of infant temperament correlated with parenting stress but not correlated with coping style. Infant temperament and parenting stress to child rearing are more significantly correlated with depressive tendency in postpartum women than coping style of postpartum women.
Child
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Child Rearing
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Depression
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Depression, Postpartum
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Female
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Humans
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Infant*
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Parenting
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Parents
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Postpartum Period*
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Psychology
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Temperament*
10.The Past, Present, and Future of Attachment Theory.
Journal of the Korean Medical Association 2008;51(4):357-362
The attachment theory, which was developed half a century ago by a British psychiatrist and psychoanalyst, John Bowlby, is the most fundamental theory for raising infants and children. His colleagues, Mary Ainsworth and James Robertson, contributed to proving Bowlby's theory with scientific ways. Many neo- Bowlbyans continue to apply theories for raising children and also for use in clinical practices. Attachment refers to the process by which people develop specific, positive emotional bonds with others. When suitably formed, people want to keep proximity with an attached object, feel safety from the object as a secure base, and resist when separated. In general, attachment has developed between infants and caregivers, mainly mothers. It usually continues till adulthood and sometimes until the next generation. Attachment is an individual affectional bond, and also can be an influential factor to decide the social policies of related realms. Therefore, the attachment theory provides very useful knowledge for child rearing parents, very practical data for doctors and allied professionals, and also very important decision framework for social policy makers.
Caregivers
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Child
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Child Rearing
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Humans
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Infant
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Mothers
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Object Attachment
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Parents
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Psychiatry
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Psychoanalysis
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Public Policy