Author:
THOMPSON ROSS A.,ONTAI LENNA
Abstract
Social support can have significant stress-preventive and stress-buffering benefits for troubled
individuals in everyday circumstances. Consequently, it is not surprising that many therapeutic and
preventive programs enlist social support to address problems of child and family
psychopathology, especially in the context of “two-generation interventions” that
seek to improve child well-being by strengthening parental functioning and parent–child
relationships. Home visitation programs are the best known of these two-generation strategies and
have become the focus of state-level and national efforts to support families and prevent harm to
children. The conclusions of basic research studies on social support converge significantly with
the findings of evaluation studies of the impact of home visitation programs to yield important
new insights into the conditions in which formal social support is likely to be beneficial, or
ineffective, in improving child and family well-being. Both basic and applied research literatures
emphasize the importance of linking formal social support to informal social networks in extended
families, neighborhoods, and communities, and attending to the complex reactions of the
recipients of support and the needs of support providers. These studies are reviewed and
evaluated to highlight the connections between social support, developmental psychopathology,
and social policy.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Developmental and Educational Psychology
Cited by
22 articles.
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