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Strengthening parental self-efficacy and resilience: A within-subject experimental study with refugee parents of adolescents

Eltanamly,Hend
Leijten,Patty
van Roekel,Eeske
Mouton,Benedicte
Pluess,Michael
Overbeek,Geertjan
Abstract
Post-migration stress and parenting adolescents can reduce parental self-efficacy. This study tested the effects of strengthening parental self-efficacy in refugee parents of adolescents and whether this makes parental self-efficacy less impacted by post-migration stressors. Using a within-subject experimental design, experience sampling data were collected in 2019 from 53 refugee parents of adolescents (Mage = 39.7, SDage = 5.59, 73% Syrian, 70% mothers) in the Netherlands. Data were analyzed by dynamic structural equation modeling using interrupted time-series analysis. The single-session personalized intervention strengthened parental self-efficacy (small effect: between case standardized mean difference = 0.09) and made refugee parents less vulnerable to post-migration stressors. Findings suggest that parental self-efficacy is malleable and strengthening it fosters refugee parents' resilience. Replications with longer-term follow-ups are needed.
Description
This research was funded by Research Priority Area Yield, University of Amsterdam, the Netherlands, grant number C.2524.0510.01.
Date
2023
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Research Projects
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Keywords
AMERICAN, ASSOCIATIONS, AUTONOMY, COMPETENCE, DECISION, FAMILIES, FEASIBILITY, INTERVENTION, RECOVERY, SOCIAL COGNITIVE THEORY
Citation
Eltanamly, H, Leijten, P, van Roekel, E, Mouton, B, Pluess, M & Overbeek, G 2023, 'Strengthening parental self-efficacy and resilience : A within-subject experimental study with refugee parents of adolescents', Child Development, vol. 94, no. 1, pp. 187-201. https://doi.org/10.1111/cdev.13848
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