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Influence of Parenting Efficacy, Parenting Stress, and Acculturation Stress on Parent-child Relations Among North Korean Refugee Mothers

Title
Influence of Parenting Efficacy, Parenting Stress, and Acculturation Stress on Parent-child Relations Among North Korean Refugee Mothers
Authors
Lee I.-S.Jeon J.-H.
Ewha Authors
전정희
SCOPUS Author ID
전정희scopus
Issue Date
2021
Journal Title
Child Health Nursing Research
ISSN
2287-9110JCR Link
Citation
Child Health Nursing Research vol. 27, no. 2, pp. 171 - 180
Keywords
AcculturationDemocratic People's Republic of Korea (North Korea)MothersParent-child relationsParenting
Publisher
Korean Academy of Child Health Nursing
Indexed
SCOPUS; KCI scopus
Document Type
Article
Abstract
Purpose: This study assessed the levels of parenting efficacy, parenting stress, and acculturation stress of North Korean refugee mothers and analyzed their effects on parent-child relations. Methods: A descriptive study design was used. Data were collected during 2019, and 124 North Korean refugee mothers participated. Results: The mean score for parenting efficacy was 53.08 out of 90, that for parent-child relations was 37.84 out of 50, and that for parenting stress was 48.57 out of 90. The parental stress score was higher than that of child-related stress. The acculturation stress level was 90.66 out of 165, with the highest stress levels found for social isolation and distrust and the lowest found for perceived discrimination. Parenting efficacy, parenting stress, acculturation stress, and parent-child relations were significantly related in North Korean refugee mothers. Hierarchical regression analysis showed that the final model had an explanatory power of 35% for parent-child relations (F=17.68, p˂.001). Parenting efficacy was the variable with the largest effect on parent-child relations (β=.36, p˂.001), followed by parenting stress (β=-.24, p=.010). Conclusion: The findings suggest the need to identify ways to decrease parenting stress and improve parenting efficacy. Parenting education can guide North Korean refugee mothers to strengthen their parent-child interactions. Copyright © 2021 Korean Academy of Child Health Nursing
DOI
10.4094/chnr.2021.27.2.171
Appears in Collections:
간호대학 > 간호학전공 > Journal papers
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