Somers Jennifer A, Winstone-Weide Laura K, Rinne Gabrielle R, Curci Sarah G, Barclay Margot E
Department of Psychology, University of California, Los Angeles, CA, USA.
Department of Neurology, University of Texas Austin, Dell Medical School, USA.
Ment Health Prev. 2024 Mar;33. doi: 10.1016/j.mhp.2024.200331. Epub 2024 Feb 15.
Significant mental health problems affect one in five youth in the United States; in tandem with the child mental health epidemic, parents in the United States report high and rising rates of burnout and mental health challenges of their own. Multiple well-established theoretical perspectives demonstrate the high degree of interdependence between children's and their parents' mental health, including intergenerational transmission, prenatal programming, attachment, and temperament and self-regulation theories. Drawing on these perspectives, we argue that a approach that centers the development of psychopathology within the context of the parent-child dyad can promote resilience and arrest emerging mental health problems for children and their parents, during sensitive developmental windows (e.g., preconception through early childhood). Derived from this integrated theoretical framework, we review empirical support for the following targets to promote family resilience: screening for current and historical parent risk factors and resilience resources; strengthening healthy, reciprocal social ties; and supporting youth socioemotional skill acquisition. Our review of the literature highlights how improvements in these areas can have cascading benefits across development, for both parents and their children, as well as for future generations. We conclude with actionable, empirically-supported recommendations that can have profound impacts on these targets through changes in federal and state policies, community healthcare settings, and early childhood education and care programs. To achieve enduring, multigenerational impacts, societal and community-level policies, programs, and practices must interweave efforts to support child mental health with efforts to promote parent adjustment and wellbeing.
在美国,每五个青少年中就有一个受到严重心理健康问题的影响;与此同时,美国的父母报告称,他们自身职业倦怠和心理健康挑战的发生率很高且呈上升趋势,儿童心理健康问题也十分普遍。多种成熟的理论观点表明,儿童与其父母的心理健康之间存在高度的相互依存关系,包括代际传递、产前编程、依恋以及气质和自我调节理论。基于这些观点,我们认为,一种以亲子二元组背景下的精神病理学发展为核心的方法,可以在敏感的发育窗口期(例如从孕前到幼儿期)促进儿童及其父母的恢复力,并阻止新出现的心理健康问题。从这个综合理论框架出发,我们回顾了促进家庭恢复力的以下目标的实证支持:筛查当前和历史上的父母风险因素及恢复力资源;加强健康、相互的社会关系;支持青少年社会情感技能的获得。我们对文献的回顾强调了这些领域的改善如何能在整个发育过程中为父母及其子女以及后代带来连锁效益。我们最后提出了可行的、有实证支持的建议,这些建议可以通过联邦和州政策、社区医疗环境以及幼儿教育和护理项目的改变,对这些目标产生深远影响。为了实现持久的多代影响,社会和社区层面的政策、项目和实践必须将支持儿童心理健康的努力与促进父母适应和幸福的努力交织在一起。