A systematic review of the role of parents in the development of anxious cognitions in children
Author(s)
Emerson, Lisa-Marie
Ogielda, Claire
Rowse, Georgina
Griffith University Author(s)
Year published
2019
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Anxious cognitions and parental behavior are important in the development of child anxiety. The current review aims to appraise the literature on the relationship between parental factors and chid anxious cognitions. Online database searches of PsycInfo, Scopus, ProQuest Dissertations and Web of Science were systematically searched using key terms related to ‘parent’, ‘child’, ‘anxiety’ and ‘cognitions’. Included studies (N = 13) were quality assessed and study findings were appraised in line with cognitive behavioral frameworks of the parental pathways to the development of anxious cognitions in children. Reviewed studies ...
View more >Anxious cognitions and parental behavior are important in the development of child anxiety. The current review aims to appraise the literature on the relationship between parental factors and chid anxious cognitions. Online database searches of PsycInfo, Scopus, ProQuest Dissertations and Web of Science were systematically searched using key terms related to ‘parent’, ‘child’, ‘anxiety’ and ‘cognitions’. Included studies (N = 13) were quality assessed and study findings were appraised in line with cognitive behavioral frameworks of the parental pathways to the development of anxious cognitions in children. Reviewed studies confirmed that parental factors have a role in the development of their children’s anxious cognitions by modelling fearful responses, reducing their child’s autonomy, and indirectly via their own expectations about their child. Limitations of the literature are considered, including issues of measurement. Future research should consider multi-modal assessment of parental factors and examine parental behavior and child anxious cognitions in the context of real-life threatening events.
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View more >Anxious cognitions and parental behavior are important in the development of child anxiety. The current review aims to appraise the literature on the relationship between parental factors and chid anxious cognitions. Online database searches of PsycInfo, Scopus, ProQuest Dissertations and Web of Science were systematically searched using key terms related to ‘parent’, ‘child’, ‘anxiety’ and ‘cognitions’. Included studies (N = 13) were quality assessed and study findings were appraised in line with cognitive behavioral frameworks of the parental pathways to the development of anxious cognitions in children. Reviewed studies confirmed that parental factors have a role in the development of their children’s anxious cognitions by modelling fearful responses, reducing their child’s autonomy, and indirectly via their own expectations about their child. Limitations of the literature are considered, including issues of measurement. Future research should consider multi-modal assessment of parental factors and examine parental behavior and child anxious cognitions in the context of real-life threatening events.
View less >
Journal Title
Journal of Anxiety Disorders
Volume
62
Subject
Clinical sciences
Psychology
Clinical and health psychology