Parental Divorce and Child Mental Health Trajectories
- 21 November 2005
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Journal of Marriage and Family
- Vol. 67 (5) , 1286-1300
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1741-3737.2005.00217.x
Abstract
A process‐oriented approach to parental divorce locates the experience within the social and developmental context of children's lives, providing greater insight into how parental divorce produces vulnerability in some children and resiliency in others. The current study involves prospectively tracking a nationally representative sample of Canadian children of ages 4–7 and living with two biological parents at initial interview in 1994 (N = 2,819), and comparing the mental health trajectories of children whose parents remain married with those whose parents divorce by 1998. Results from growth curve models confirm that, even before marital breakup, children whose parents later divorce exhibit higher levels of anxiety/depression and antisocial behavior than children whose parents remain married. There is a further increase in child anxiety/depression but not antisocial behavior associated with the event of parental divorce itself. Controlling for predivorce parental socioeconomic and psychosocial resources fully accounts for poorer child mental health at initial interview among children whose parents later divorce, but does not explain the divorce‐specific increase in anxiety/depression. Finally, a significant interaction between parental divorce and predivorce levels of family dysfunction suggests that child antisocial behavior decreases when marriages in highly dysfunctional families are dissolved.Keywords
This publication has 45 references indexed in Scilit:
- Identifying the Effects of Income on Children's Development Using Experimental DataJournal of Marriage and Family, 2003
- A Programmatic Review: Building a Two-Way Bridge between Social Psychology and the Study of the Early Years of MarriageJournal of Social and Personal Relationships, 2002
- The Consequences of Divorce for Adults and ChildrenJournal of Marriage and Family, 2000
- Parental Conflict and Marital Disruption: Do Children Benefit When High-Conflict Marriages Are Dissolved?Journal of Marriage and Family, 1999
- Does Parental Conflict Explain Why Divorce Is Negatively Associated with Child Welfare?Social Forces, 1999
- Windows on Divorce: Before and afterSocial Science Research, 1998
- Parental Conflict, Marital Disruption and Children's Emotional Well-BeingSocial Forces, 1998
- The Divorce Process and Young Children's Well-Being: A Prospective AnalysisJournal of Marriage and Family, 1995
- Parental Divorce, Marital Conflict, and Offspring Well-being during Early AdulthoodSocial Forces, 1995
- The CES-D ScaleApplied Psychological Measurement, 1977