What Factors Contribute to High Levels of Family Disruption in African-american Families?

Abstruse

Background

Considerable prior research targeting African American children has focused on the pervasiveness of problematic behavior and negative risk factors associated with their development, however the influence of family unit on better behavioral wellness outcomes has largely been ignored.

Objective

The purpose of this review is to examine empirical studies that focus on the association between family-level factors (e.g., parenting practices, family unit functioning) and African American children'south behavioral health. Specifically, nosotros examined the studies' characteristics, the relationship between various family-level factors and behavioral health outcomes, and the extent to which these studies consider racial, ethnic, and/or cultural nuances and competencies.

Methods

This review was guided by systematic review methods of Gough et al. (An introduction to systematic reviews. Sage, London, 2012) and Moher et al. (Preferred reporting items for systematic reviews and meta-analyses: the PRISMA statement. PLoS Med half dozen(6):e1000097, 2009). Thirty-five studies were included and assessed.

Results

The bulk of the studies' samples were low-income, resided in female-headed households, and lived in urban areas. Parenting practices (66 % of studies) were by far the most frequently examined family-level gene associated with behavioral health outcomes. A few studies examined the moderating or mediating role of racial discrimination and/or racial socialization.

Conclusion

Findings from this review tin inform the development or accommodation of family-based interventions that tin finer promote meliorate behavioral health and resiliency of African American children and adolescents.

References

  • Achenbach, T., & Rescorla, 50. (2001). Manual for ASEBA school-historic period forms & profiles. Burlington, VT: University of Vermont.

    Google Scholar

  • American Psychological Clan, & Task Forcefulness on Resilience and Force in Black Children and Adolescents. (2008). Resilience in African American children and adolescents: A vision for optimal development. Washington, DC: Author.

    Google Scholar

  • Bailey, B. N., Hannigan, J. H., Delaney-Black, V., Covington, C., & Sokol, R. J. (2006). The part of maternal acceptance in the relation between community violence exposure and child functioning. Journal of Abnormal Kid Psychology, 34(1), 57–70.

    Commodity  PubMed  Google Scholar

  • Barnett, T. E., Rowley, Southward., Zimmerman, M. A., Vansadia, P., & Howard Caldwell, C. (2011). A longitudinal study of household change on African American adolescents. Journal of Community Psychology, 39(iii), 303–315.

    PubMed Key  Article  PubMed  Google Scholar

  • Brody, M. H., Chen, Y., Murry, 5. K., Ge, X., Simons, R. L., Gibbons, F. X., Gerrard, M., & Cutrona, C. Eastward. (2006). Preceived bigotry and the aligning of African American youths: A V-Yr longitudinal analysis with contextual moderation effects. Child Development, 77(5), 1170–1189.

  • Brody, Thou. H., Ge, Ten., Kim, Due south. Y., Murry, V. M., Simons, R. L., Gibbons, F. X., et al. (2003). Neighborhood disadvantage moderates associations of parenting and older sibling problem attitudes and behavior with conduct disorders in African American children. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 71(2), 211–222.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar

  • Bryant, A. L., & Zimmerman, M. A. (2003). Part models and psychosocial outcomes amidst African American adolescents. Journal of Adolescent Research, 18(1), 36–67.

    Article  Google Scholar

  • Buckingham-Howes, Southward., Oberlander, Due south. Due east., Hurley, 1000. Thousand., Fitzmaurice, Due south., & Black, M. M. (2011). Trajectories of boyish mother-grandmother psychological conflict during early parenting and children'southward problem behaviors at age 7. Periodical of Clinical Child and Adolescent Psychology, forty(3), 445–455.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar

  • Chester, C., Jones, D. J., Zalot, A., & Sterrett, E. (2007). The psychosocial adjustment of African American youth from single mother homes: The relative contribution of parents and peers. Journal of Clinical Child and Adolescent Psychology, 36, 356–366.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar

  • Coard, S., & Sellers, R. (2005). African American families as a context for racial socialization. In V. McLoyd, N. Loma, & Chiliad. Dodge (Eds.), Emerging issues in African-American family unit life: Context, adaptation, and policy. New York: Guildford Printing.

    Google Scholar

  • Coker, T. R., Elliott, M. N., Kanouse, D. E., Grunbaum, J. A., Schwebel, D. C., Gilliland, Yard. J., et al. (2009). Perceived racial/ethnic discrimination amid fifth-grade students and its association with mental health. American Journal of Public Health, 99(5), 878–884.

    PubMed Central  Commodity  PubMed  Google Scholar

  • Coley, R. 50. (2003). Daughter–father relationships and adolescent psychosocial functioning in low-income African American families. Journal of Wedlock & Family, 65(four), 867–875.

    Article  Google Scholar

  • Cooper, S., Brown, C., Metzger, I., Clinton, Y., & Guthrie, B. (2013). Racial bigotry and African American adolescents' aligning: Gender variation in family and community social support, promotive and protective factors. Journal of Child and Family Studies, 22(1), 15–29.

    Article  Google Scholar

  • Davis, G. Y., & Stevenson, H. C. (2006). Racial socialization experiences and symptoms of depression amidst Black youth. Journal of Child and Family Studies, 15(3), 303–317.

    Article  Google Scholar

  • Elmore, C., & Gaylord-Harden, N. (2013). The influence of supportive parenting and racial socialization messages on African American youth behavioral outcomes. Journal of Kid and Family Studies, 22(i), 63–75.

    Article  Google Scholar

  • Forehand, R., & Jones, D. J. (2003). Neighborhood violence and coparent conflict: Interactive influence on child psychosocial aligning. Journal of Abnormal Kid Psychology, 31(half dozen), 591–604.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar

  • Grant, Thousand. E., O'Koon, J. H., Davis, T. H., Roache, N. A., Poindexter, L. K., Armstrong, M. L., et al. (2000). Protective factors affecting low-income urban African American youth exposed to stress. Journal of Early Boyhood, 20, 388–417. doi:10.1177/0272431600020004002

  • Gough, D., Oliver, South., & Thomas, J. (2012). An introduction to systematic reviews. London: Sage.

    Google Scholar

  • Gutman, L. One thousand., Friedel, J. N., & Hitt, R. (2003). Keeping adolescents safe from harm: Management strategies of african-american families in a high-take a chance community. Journal of School Psychology, 41(3), 167–184.

    Article  Google Scholar

  • Hill, R. B. (1999). The strengths of African American families: Xx-five years afterward. Lanham, MD: Academy Press of America.

    Google Scholar

  • Jackson, A. P. (2003). The effects of family and neighborhood characteristics on the behavioral and cerebral evolution of poor Blackness children: A longitudinal written report. American Journal of Community Psychology, 32(1/two), 175–186.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar

  • Jackson, A. P., Preston, K. S. J., & Thomas, C. A. (2013). Single mothers, nonresident fathers, and preschoolers' socioemotional development: Social support, psychological well-being, and parenting quality. Journal of Social Service Research, 39(1), 129–140.

    Article  Google Scholar

  • Jackson, A. P., & Scheines, R. (2005). Single mothers' self-efficacy, parenting in the home surround, and children'due south development in a two-wave study. Social Work Research, 29(1), seven–20.

    Article  Google Scholar

  • Jenkins, E. J., Wang, E., & Turner, L. (2009). Traumatic events involving friends and family members in a sample of African American early on adolescents. American Journal of Orthopsychiatry, 79(three), 398–406.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar

  • Jones, D. J., Forehand, R., Rakow, A., Colletti, C. J. One thousand., McKee, L., & Zalot, A. (2008). The specificity of maternal parenting behavior and child adjustment difficulties: A study of inner-urban center African American families. Journal of Family Psychology, 22(2), 181–192.

    Commodity  PubMed  Google Scholar

  • Kaslow, N. J., Heron, S., Roberts, D. K., Thompson, M., Guessous, O., & Jones, C. (2003). Family and community factors that predict internalizing and externalizing symptoms in low-income, African-American children. Annals of the New York University of Sciences, 1008, 55–68.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar

  • Kaslow, N. J., & Thompson, M. P. (2008). Associations of child maltreatment and intimate partner violence with psychological adjustment among low SES, African American children. Child Abuse and Neglect, 32(9), 888–896.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar

  • Koblinsky, S. A., Kuvalanka, K. A., & Randolph, S. Thousand. (2006). Social skills and behavior issues of urban, African American preschoolers: Part of parenting practices, family disharmonize, and maternal depression. American Periodical of Orthopsychiatry, 76(4), 554–563.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar

  • Kwon, J., Delaney-Black, V., Covington, C., Abell, S. C., Nordstrom-Bailey, B., Sokol, R. J., & Ager, J. (2006). The relations between maternal expressed emotion and children's perceived self-competence, behavior and intelligence in African-American families. Early on Child Development and Care, 176(ii), 195–206.

    Commodity  Google Scholar

  • Lindsey, Grand. A., Browne, D. C., Thompson, R., Hawley, K. M., Graham, J. C., Weisbart, C., et al. (2008). Caregiver mental health, neighborhood, and social network influences on mental health needs amongst African American children. Social Work Research, 32(2), 79–88.

    Commodity  Google Scholar

  • Marshall, S. (1995). Ethnic socialization of African American children: Implications for parenting, identity evolution and academic accomplishment. Periodical of Youth and Adolescence, 24(4), 377–396.

    Commodity  Google Scholar

  • McAdoo, H. P. (1997). Upwards mobility across generations in African American families. In H. P. McAdoo (Ed.), Black families (3rd ed., pp. 139–162). One thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.

    Google Scholar

  • McLoyd, V. C., Toyokawa, T., & Kaplan, R. (2008). Work demands, work-family unit disharmonize, and child adjustment in African American families: The mediating role of family unit routines. Periodical of Family Bug, 29(10), 1247–1267.

    Article  Google Scholar

  • McNeil, Due south., Harris-McKoy, D., Brantley, C., Fincham, F., & Beach, S. R. (2013). Middle course African American mothers' depressive symptoms mediate perceived discrimination and reported child externalizing behaviors. Periodical of Child and Family unit Studies, 1–8.

  • Mitchell, S. J., Lewin, A., Horn, I. B., Rasmussen, A., Sanders-Phillips, K., Valentine, D., & Joseph, J. G. (2009). Violence exposure and the association betwixt young African American mothers' subject and child trouble behavior. Academic Pediatrics, ix(three), 157–163.

    PubMed Central  Commodity  PubMed  Google Scholar

  • Mitchell, S. J., Lewin, A., Rasmussen, A., Horn, I. B., & Joseph, J. G. (2010). Maternal distress explains the human relationship of young African American mothers' violence exposure with their preschoolers' behavior. Journal of Interpersonal Violence, 26(3), 580–603.

    PubMed Central  Article  PubMed  Google Scholar

  • Moher, D., Liberati, A., Tetzlaff, J., Altman, D. G., & The PRISMA Group. (2009). Preferred reporting items for systematic reviews and meta-analyses: The PRISMA argument. PLoS Medicine, 6(6), e1000097.

    PubMed Central  Article  PubMed  Google Scholar

  • Murray, C. B., Stokes, J. Due east., & Peacock, M. J. (1999). Racial socialization of African American children: A review. In R. Fifty. Jones (Ed.), African American children, youth and parenting (pp. 209–229). Virginia: Cobb & Henry.

    Google Scholar

  • Nievar, M. A., & Luster, T. (2006). Developmental processes in African American families: An application of Mcloyd's theoretical model. Journal of Marriage and Family, 68(2), 320–331.

    Article  Google Scholar

  • Oravecz, L. Thousand., Osteen, P. J., Sharpe, T. L., & Randolph, S. Thou. (2011). Assessing low-income African-American pre-schoolers' behaviour problems in relationship to customs violence, inter-partner conflict, parenting, informal social support and social skills. Kid and Family Social Work, sixteen(3), 310–324.

    Commodity  Google Scholar

  • Rodriguez, J., McKay, M. M., & Bannon, Due west. M., Jr. (2008). The role of racial socialization in relation to parenting practices and youth behavior: An exploratory analysis. Social Work in Mental Health, 6(4), 30–54.

    PubMed Cardinal  Article  PubMed  Google Scholar

  • Schaefer, R. T. (2004). Racial and ethnic groups. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Pearson-Prentice Hall.

    Google Scholar

  • Schiff, 1000., & McKay, M. One thousand. (2003). Urban youth disruptive behavioral difficulties: Exploring clan with parenting and gender. Family unit Process, 42(iv), 517–529.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar

  • Simons, 50., Simons, R., & Su, Ten. (2013). Consequences of corporal punishment amongst African Americans: The importance of context and outcome. Journal of Youth and Adolescence, 42(eight), 1273–1285.

    Commodity  PubMed  Google Scholar

  • Spjeldnes, Due south., & Choi, J. (2008). Straight and indirect furnishings of interparental relationship quality on child beliefs problems in low-income, Black, unmarried-mother families. Union & Family unit Review, 44(4), 411–438.

    Article  Google Scholar

  • Stevenson, H. C., Davis, G., & Abdul-Kabir, Southward. (2001). Stickin' to, watchin' over, and gettin' with: An African American parent's guide to bailiwick. San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass.

    Google Scholar

  • Stevenson, H., Winn, D. M., Walker-Barnes, C., & Coard, Due south. (2005). Style matters: Towards a culturally relevant framework for interventions with African American families. In V. McLoyd, N. Hill, & K. Dodge (Eds.), Emerging issues in African-American family life: Context, adaptation, and policy. New York: Guildford Press.

    Google Scholar

  • Su, X., Simons, R. L., & Simons, L. Yard. (2011). Interparental aggression and hating behavior amongst African American youth: A simultaneous test of competing explanations. Periodical of Youth and Adolescence, 40(11), 1489–1502.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar

  • Taylor, R. D. (2010). Risk and resilience in low-income African American families: Moderating effects of kinship social support. Cultural Variety & Ethnic Minority Psychology, 16(three), 344–351.

    Article  Google Scholar

  • Taylor, R. D., Budescu, 1000., Gebre, A., & Hodzic, I. (2012a). Family financial pressure and maternal and adolescent socioemotional adjustment: Moderating effects of kin social support in low income African American families. Journal of Child and Family Studies, 23(2), 242–254.

    Article  Google Scholar

  • Taylor, R. D., Lopez, Due east. I., McGill, R. K., & McGill, R. K. (2012b). Parenting practices and adolescent internalizing and externalizing problems: Moderating effects of socially demanding kin relations. Journal of Child and Family Studies, 21(three), 474–485.

    Commodity  Google Scholar

  • Tolou-Shams, M., Paikoff, R., McKirnan, D. J., & Holmbec, G. North. (2007). Mental health and HIV risk among African American adolescents: The function of parenting. Social Work in Mental Health, v(i), 27–58.

    Commodity  Google Scholar

  • Ward, J. V. (2000). The skin we're in: Teaching our teens to be emotionally strong, socially smart and spiritually connected. New York: Simon and Schuster.

    Google Scholar

  • Washington, T., Cryer, Q., Coakley, T., Labben, J., Gleeson, J., & Shears, J. (2014). Examining maternal and paternal interest as promotive factors of competence in African American children in informal kinship care. Children and Youth Services Review, 44, 9–15.

    Article  Google Scholar

  • Washington, T., Gleeson, J. P., & Rulison, K. L. (2013). Competence and African American children in informal kinship care: The function of family. Children and Youth Services Review, 35(ix), 1305–1312.

    Article  Google Scholar

  • Wilson, M. N. (1990). Familial support in the Blackness community. Journal of Clinical Child Psychology, 19(4), 347–355.

    Article  Google Scholar

  • Wright, One thousand. (1998). I'grand chocolate, you're vanilla: Raising good for you Black and biracial children in a race-conscious world. San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass.

    Google Scholar

Download references

Author information

Affiliations

Corresponding author

Correspondence to Tyreasa Washington.

Most this article

Verify currency and authenticity via CrossMark

Cite this article

Washington, T., Rose, T., Colombo, M. et al. Family-Level Factors and African American Children's Behavioral Health Outcomes: A Systematic Review. Child Youth Care Forum 44, 819–834 (2015). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10566-015-9308-z

Download citation

  • Published:

  • Issue Appointment:

  • DOI : https://doi.org/10.1007/s10566-015-9308-z

Keywords

  • Family
  • Behavioral health
  • African American children
  • Protective factors
  • Adolescents

schneidermobleclat.blogspot.com

Source: https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10566-015-9308-z

0 Response to "What Factors Contribute to High Levels of Family Disruption in African-american Families?"

Post a Comment

Iklan Atas Artikel

Iklan Tengah Artikel 1

Iklan Tengah Artikel 2

Iklan Bawah Artikel