Parental involvement in home visiting: Interpersonal predictors and correlates

Infant Mental Health Journal
Susan SierauTanja Jungmann

Abstract

Parents' commitment to and usage of early intervention are key variables in understanding discrepancies in families' susceptibility to these services. Although the important role of fathers in infant development is widely recognized, early interpersonal predictors of paternal involvement in home-visiting programs have been understudied. This article aims to fill this gap by regressing parents' postnatal involvement on prenatal partnership satisfaction and quality of the helping relationship in a sample of 124 socially and financially disadvantaged families. Paternal program engagement was predicted by partnership satisfaction whereas the perceived quality of the helping relationship best predicted maternal program engagement, with demographical characteristics controlled. Maternal program engagement also mediated the relationship between partnership satisfaction and paternal program engagement. The results are discussed against the theoretical background.

References

Sep 2, 2009·The Future of Children·Kimberly S Howard, Jeanne Brooks-Gunn
Jan 1, 1995·Multivariate Behavioral Research·David P MackinnonJames H Dwyer
Sep 1, 2007·Infant Mental Health Journal·Jon KorfmacherKathy R Thornburg

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Citations

Mar 24, 2015·Infant Mental Health Journal·Matthew J ThullenSydney Hans
Feb 11, 2021·Praxis der Kinderpsychologie und Kinderpsychiatrie·Christoph Liel, Andreas Eickhorst

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