Price Wolf Jennifer, Freisthler Bridget
School of Social Work, San Jose State University, 1 Washington Square, San Jose, CA 95112, United States.
College of Social Work, The University of Tennessee, Knoxville, 916 Volunteer Blvd., Stokely Management Center, Knoxville, TN 37916, United States.
Alcohol Alcohol. 2025 Mar 25;60(3). doi: 10.1093/alcalc/agaf020.
The COVID-19 pandemic had a demonstrated impact on parenting but little is known about how parental drinking, stress, and use of aggressive discipline (a parenting behavior associated with abusive parenting and negative outcomes for children) have changed over time. We examine rates of alcohol use, stress, and aggressive discipline at three time points during the COVID-19 pandemic and investigate what maternal, child, and time-varying factors predict weekly use of aggressive parenting.
We use longitudinal data from the Central Ohio Family Study (COFLS), including women (n = 234) with a child between the ages of 0-12 and recruited via Facebook, Craigslist.org, and word of mouth. Participants completed an on-line survey for 3 consecutive years beginning in April-May 2020 and 1 and 2 years later. Multilevel logistic regression models were used to examine use of aggressive discipline at the three time points, controlling for time-varying, and maternal and child characteristics.
Past week use of aggressive discipline peaked in Wave 1 (35.9%) and decreased at Wave 2 (3.8%) and Wave 3 (28.2%; OR = .463; 95% CI: .369, .580). Parental stress (OR = 1.052; 95% CI: 1.010, 1.096), social isolation (OR = 1.412; 95% CI: 1.197, 1.668), social companionship (OR = 1.113; 95% CI: 1.007, 1.229), and frequency of drinking (OR = 1.049; 95% CI: 1.014, 1.085) were significantly related to higher odds of using aggressive discipline over the three waves.
Although rates of aggressive discipline declined, frequency of drinking and stress demonstrated a consistent pattern in relation to aggressive discipline during the COVID-19 pandemic.
新冠疫情已被证明对育儿产生了影响,但对于父母饮酒、压力以及攻击性管教方式(一种与虐待性育儿和儿童负面结果相关的育儿行为)如何随时间变化却知之甚少。我们研究了新冠疫情期间三个时间点的酒精使用、压力和攻击性管教发生率,并调查了哪些母亲、孩子和随时间变化的因素可预测每周攻击性育儿行为的发生情况。
我们使用俄亥俄州中部家庭研究(COFLS)的纵向数据,包括通过脸书、Craigslist.org和口碑招募的234名有0至12岁孩子的女性。参与者从2020年4月至5月开始连续三年完成在线调查,之后分别在1年和2年后再次进行调查。使用多水平逻辑回归模型来研究三个时间点的攻击性管教情况,并控制随时间变化的因素以及母亲和孩子的特征。
过去一周内攻击性管教的发生率在第1波达到峰值(35.9%),在第2波(3.8%)和第3波(28.2%;OR = 0.463;95% CI:0.369,0.580)有所下降。父母压力(OR = 1.052;95% CI:1.010,1.096)、社交隔离(OR = 1.412;95% CI:1.197,1.668)、社交陪伴(OR = 1.113;95% CI:1.007,1.229)以及饮酒频率(OR = 1.049;95% CI:1.014,1.085)与在这三波调查中使用攻击性管教的较高几率显著相关。
尽管攻击性管教发生率有所下降,但在新冠疫情期间,饮酒频率和压力与攻击性管教呈现出一致的关联模式。