Actor and Partner Effects of Interparental Relationship and Co-Parenting on Parenting Stress Among Fathers and Mothers

Author:

Park In Young1ORCID,Bellamy Jennifer L.2ORCID,Speer Stephanie Rachel3,Kim Jangmin4ORCID,Kwan Jin Yao5,Powe Paula6ORCID,Banman Aaron7,Harty Justin S.8,Guterman Neil B.9

Affiliation:

1. PhD, postdoctoral fellow, Boston College, Chestnut Hill, MA, USA

2. PhD, professor, vice provost, faculty affairs, University of Denver, CO, USA

3. PhD, assistant professor, Bryn Mawr College, PA, USA

4. PhD, assistant professor, University at Buffalo, NY, USA

5. PhD, assistant professor, University of Delaware, Newark, USA

6. PhD, assistant professor, University of Pittsburgh, PA, USA

7. PhD, assistant professor, University of Nebraska Omaha, USA

8. PhD, assistant professor, Arizona State University, Phoenix, USA

9. PhD, Paulette Goddard professor, New York University, New York City, USA

Abstract

Despite increasing father involvement in rearing their children, research on the determinants of parenting stress has focused on mothers, ignoring the mutual influence between the two parents—fathers and mothers. Using the actor–partner interdependence model, we examined fathers’ and mothers’ reciprocal influences on parenting stress, with a focus on interparental relationship and co-parenting. Data from 174 couple dyads from the Dads Matter-HV© program were analyzed. Findings showed that both mothers’ and fathers’ co-parenting directly reduced their own parenting stress. Fathers’ co-parenting significantly mediated the association between their own interparental relationship and parenting stress and the association between their own interparental relationship and mothers’ parenting stress. Findings suggest fathers’ perceptions of co-parenting are an important protective factor to be targeted by early child and family programs among parents at risk for chronic and parenting stress.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Social Sciences (miscellaneous)

Reference51 articles.

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4. Parenting Stress through the Lens of Different Clinical Groups: a Systematic Review & Meta-Analysis

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