Maternal Childhood Abuse, Intimate Partner Violence, and Child Psychopathology: The Mediator Role of Mothers’ Mental Health
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2013Metadata
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Miranda, Jenniffer K.
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Maternal Childhood Abuse, Intimate Partner Violence, and Child Psychopathology: The Mediator Role of Mothers’ Mental Health
Abstract
This study examined the mediator role of mothers’ mental health in the relationship
among maternal childhood abuse (CA), intimate partner violence (IPV), and offspring’s
psychopathology, and explored whether mediational pathways were moderated by
children’s sex. Participants were 327 Spanish outpatient children, 8 to 17 years old, and
their mothers. Mothers’ global psychological distress and depressive symptoms mediated
the associations between mothers’ violence history and children’s externalizing problems.
However, only depressive symptoms fully mediated these relationships. Children’s sex
did not have a moderating role in adjusted paths. Mothers’ depressive symptoms are an
important mechanism by which maternal violence experiences could affect externalizing
problems in Spanish children.
General note
Artículo de publicación ISI
Patrocinador
This work was supported by grant SEJ2005-01786 from
Ministry of Education and Science (Spain).
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Violence Against Women 19(1) 50– 68, 2013
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