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Journal article

The Family Standpoint of Investigation: Examining the Correlates and Costs of Parental Stress in a Sample of Families Involved With Ontario Child Welfare

Abstract

Consistent with contemporary theories related to the well-being and adjustment of children, the Ontario Child Welfare Transformation policy suggests that researchers and practitioners consider multiple levels of analysis when attempting to understand, prevent, and respond to childhood adversity. By examining the phenomenon of parental stress among child welfare cases, the present study sought to integrate family, child, and service-system levels of analysis through a family-based standpoint of investigation. A sample of 135 families was selected from three Children's Aid Societies in southern Ontario. Using hierarchical regression, we found that child developmental milestones (4–47 months old) and child behavioural and emotional strengths (48 months +) were associated with parental stress, accounting for variance beyond family-level predictors. Children of parents who were stressed had higher health and social service costs, though this trend did not apply for stressed parents themselves. Theoretical and applied implications are discussed.

Authors

Browne DT; Verticchio D; Shlonsky A; Thabane L; Hoch J; Byrne C

Journal

Canadian Journal of Community Mental Health, Vol. 29, No. 2, pp. 131–154

Publisher

Canadian Periodical for Community Studies

Publication Date

September 1, 2010

DOI

10.7870/cjcmh-2010-0027

ISSN

0713-3936

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