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Citation

Jensen, Todd M. & Lippold, Melissa A. (2018). Patterns of Stepfamily Relationship Quality and Adolescents’ Short-Term and Long-Term Adjustment. Journal of Family Psychology, 32(8), 1130-1141. PMCID: PMC6289700

Abstract

Stepfamilies experience unique dynamics, with implications for family functioning and youth well-being. Emerging research is incorporating a holistic perspective whereby stepfamily dynamics are viewed more comprehensively, and constellations of stepfamily relationship quality are identified. In the current study, we examined short-term and long-term associations between latent patterns of stepfamily relationships (including the quality of mother-child, stepfather-child, nonresident father-child, and stepcouple dyads) and youth adjustment (i.e., depression, delinquency, self-esteem) across three stages of youth development: adolescence, emerging adulthood, and young adulthood. Using a representative sample of adolescents from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health (Harris et al., 2009), results from longitudinal structural equation models and latent-growth curve models indicated that youth adjustment over time is optimized among youth in a residence-centered (i.e., high-quality relationships among mother-child, stepfather-child, and stepcouple dyads) or inclusive (i.e., high-quality relationships across all dyads, including the nonresident father) pattern, as compared with youth in an unhappy-couple (i.e., low-quality stepcouple relationship) or parent-child disconnection (i.e., low-quality relationships between youth and each parental figure) pattern. The results point to many similarities between male and female youth in terms of adjustment responses to patterns of stepfamily relationships, although some differences became apparent. In the context of stepfamily relationships marked by low-quality relationships, male youth might exhibit greater initial levels of externalizing problems than female youth, whereas female youth might exhibit greater initial levels of internalizing problems than male youth. Implications for future research and intervention and prevention efforts are discussed.

URL

http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/fam0000442

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year Published

2018

Journal Title

Journal of Family Psychology

Author(s)

Jensen, Todd M.
Lippold, Melissa A.

Article Type

Regular

PMCID

PMC6289700

Data Set/Study

National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health (Add Health)

Continent/Country

United States

State

Nonspecific

Race/Ethnicity

Hispanic
Black
White

ORCiD

Jensen T - 0000-0002-6930-899X