Patterns of adverse childhood experiences among Chinese preschool parents and the intergenerational transmission of risk to offspring behavioural problems : moderating by coparenting quality

Background: Although intergenerational transmission of ACEs among parents and their offspring have been extensively studied in the West, few studies have been conducted in China on preschool children and their parents, and explore the protective fact for the intergeneration transmission.

 

Objective: Using latent class analysis and moderation model, this study examined the associations between patterns of adverse childhood experiences of Chinese preschool parents and behavioural problems in their children and whether coparenting quality plays a protective role in this relationship.

 

Method: A retrospective study was conducted on 3091 parent–child dyads from 11 kindergartens in the northern, central, and southern Anhui provinces in China. Online questionnaires were used to collect the data. Parents reported adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) and provided information on their children's behavioural problems and perceived coparenting quality. Latent class analysis and a moderating model were used to examine the associations between patterns of adverse childhood experiences of Chinese preschool parents and behavioural problems in their children, and the moderating role of coparenting quality.

 

Results: Four classes were identified: a high ACEs group, a violent victimisation group, a child abuse and physical neglect group, and a low ACEs group. Increasing levels of co-parenting quality were associated with reduced parent-reported child behaviour problems for all classes, and that potentially buffering effect was significantly stronger for the low ACEs class than for children whose parents in high ACEs class.

 

Conclusions: Exposure to high ACEs increases the risk of developing behavioural problems in offspring, and coparenting quality may serve as a protective mechanism for intergenerational transmission. Future research should develop and implement interventions to support disadvantaged, at-risk parents and promote coparenting quality.

 

HIGHLIGHTS

 

  • Four classes of parental ACEs were identified: a high ACEs group, child abuse and physical neglect group, violence victimisation group, and a low ACEs group.
  • Children with parents classified in the violence victimisation and low ACEs groups were associated with fewer behavioural problems.
  • With higher levels of coparenting quality those in the low ACEs class reported lower offspring behavioural problems.
Reference: 
Yantong Zhu, Gengli Zhang & Tokie Anme | 2022
In: European Journal of Psychotraumatology ; ISSN: 2000-8066 | 13 | 2 | 2137913
https://doi.org/10.1080/20008066.2022.2137913
Keywords: 
Child Abuse, Childhood Adversities, Children, Intergenerational Effects, Offspring, Parents, Quality of Life, Statistical Analysis, Violence