Parenting & Family Support Centre, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia.
The University of Manchester, Manchester, UK.
Clin Child Fam Psychol Rev. 2019 Mar;22(1):104-117. doi: 10.1007/s10567-019-00278-0.
Self-regulation is developed early in life through family and parenting interactions. There has been considerable debate on how to best conceptualize and enhance self-regulation. Many consider self-regulation as the socio-emotional competencies required for healthy and productive living, including the flexibility to regulate emotions, control anger, maintain calm under pressure, and respond adaptively to a variety of situations. Its enhancement is the focus of many child and family interventions. An important limitation of the self-regulation field is that most empirical and conceptual research comes from high-income countries (HICs). Less is known about the manifestation, measurement and role of self-regulation in many collectivistic, rural, or less-developed contexts such as low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). This position paper aims to present an initial review of the existing literature on self-regulation in LMICs, with a focus on parenting, and to describe challenges in terms of measurement and implementation of self-regulation components into existing interventions for parents, children and adolescents in these settings. We conclude by establishing steps or recommendations for conducting basic research to understand how self-regulation expresses itself in vulnerable and low-resource settings and for incorporating components of self-regulation into services in LMICs.
自我调节是在家庭和育儿互动中早期发展起来的。关于如何最好地概念化和增强自我调节,已经有了相当多的争论。许多人认为自我调节是健康和富有成效生活所需的社会情感能力,包括调节情绪、控制愤怒、在压力下保持冷静以及灵活适应各种情况的能力。其增强是许多儿童和家庭干预的重点。自我调节领域的一个重要限制是,大多数实证和概念研究都来自高收入国家(HICs)。在许多集体主义、农村或欠发达的背景下,如低收入和中等收入国家(LMICs),自我调节的表现、测量和作用知之甚少。本立场文件旨在对 LMIC 中自我调节的现有文献进行初步回顾,重点是育儿,并描述在这些环境中针对父母、儿童和青少年的现有干预措施中测量和实施自我调节组成部分的挑战。最后,我们确定了开展基础研究的步骤或建议,以了解自我调节在脆弱和资源匮乏环境中的表现,并将自我调节的组成部分纳入 LMIC 中的服务。