National Institutes of Health, USA.
J Health Psychol. 2024 Sep;29(11):1253-1265. doi: 10.1177/13591053241233336. Epub 2024 Feb 22.
The extent to which parents experience guilt related to their child's health may depend on their perceptions of their contribution to these outcomes. The impact of the child's "other" biological parent's (OBP) contribution to child health on guilt responses is understudied. Some models posit a diffusion-of-responsibility process, while others favor a heightened-risk-heightened-guilt model. The present study examines how perceived OBP contribution to child risk affects guilt among a sample of parents with self-reported overweight. Parents who perceived their child's OBP to also have overweight experienced more guilt for passing down genetic and family environment-based obesity risk to their child, which suggests that perceptions of shared risk contribution promote guilt-related outcomes. Additionally, risk information endorsing a gene-environment interaction liability framing was the most responsive to OBP weight status. These results support a heightened-risk-heightened-guilt process. Future work should consider guilt when developing child health interventions to avoid undesirable emotional outcomes among parents.
父母对孩子健康相关的内疚感程度可能取决于他们对自己对这些结果的贡献的看法。孩子的“另一位”亲生父母(OBP)对孩子健康的贡献对内疚反应的影响研究较少。一些模型假设了责任扩散过程,而另一些则倾向于高风险-高内疚模型。本研究考察了父母对孩子风险的感知 OBP 贡献如何影响超重的父母群体的内疚感。那些认为自己孩子的 OBP 也超重的父母,对将遗传和家庭环境引起的肥胖风险遗传给孩子感到更加内疚,这表明对共同风险贡献的看法会促进与内疚相关的结果。此外,支持基因-环境相互作用易感性框架的风险信息对 OBP 体重状况最为敏感。这些结果支持高风险-高内疚的过程。未来的研究在制定儿童健康干预措施时应考虑内疚感,以避免父母产生不良的情绪后果。