A Longitudinal study of the association between parenting styles and adolescent mental health outcomes

Authors

  • Noah Aaron Faculty of Medicine, Paris Descartes Universit,France
  • Jack Oliver University of Melbourne, Australia

Keywords:

Parenting Style (PS), Adolescent mental health outcomes (AMHO), permissive (P), Authoritative (A), Neglectful (N), authoritarianism (A)

Abstract

The essential purpose of this research study is to measure the longitudinal research between parenting styles and adolescent mental health outcomes. This research study is based on primary research data analysis to determine the research study and develop different informative questions related to the independent and dependent variables. Parenting styles are the main independent variables. It includes Permissive, authoritative, neglectful, and authoritarianism. These are all considered independent variables. Adolescent mental health outcomes are the main dependent variable. For measuring, the research study used SPSS software and generated informative results, including descriptive statistics and paired correlations; the paired sample statistical analysis also presented the one-way ANOVA test analysis related to the indicators. This long-term study aimed to understand the evolving relationship between parental practices and adolescent mental health outcomes. Evidence shows that different parental control and warmth levels impact children's growth and well-being. Though adolescence is a crucial developmental stage, little research has looked explicitly at how parenting approaches affect mental health outcomes at this time. The study followed a sample of teenagers to gather information on parental practices and the results of mental health outcomes over several years. The research study found a significant and direct link between parenting style and mental health outcomes. Parenting styles play a vital role in adolescent mental health outcomes.

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Published

2022-11-10