Health Correlates of Abuse History and Moderating Effect of Parenting Stress for Mothers with Mental Disorders.
Jessica Roberts WilliamsBrian E McCabeLila de TantilloKristin LevoyVictoria Behar-ZusmanPublished in: Issues in mental health nursing (2020)
Parenting stress is common and may lead to worsening health, particularly in the context of other risk factors such as mental disorders or a history of abuse. This study investigated how parenting-related stress impacts the effect of abuse experiences on health among mothers with mental health disorders. Survey data was analyzed from 172 predominantly Hispanic mothers receiving outpatient behavioral health services. Most (80.2%) mothers had experienced abuse. Those reporting childhood abuse had 3.82 greater odds of experiencing abuse in adulthood. Findings demonstrated worse health outcomes among those experiencing abuse in both childhood and adulthood and those with a greater number of abuse experiences. Caregiving load intensified the relationship between abuse and anxiety and sleep disturbance. Parenting self-agency intensified the relationship between abuse and cigarette use. These findings have important implications for mental health nursing practice by identifying parenting-stress as an important target for interventions to improve health among women with histories of abuse and mental health disorders.
Keyphrases
- mental health
- healthcare
- intimate partner violence
- public health
- risk factors
- mental illness
- health information
- primary care
- physical activity
- cross sectional
- emergency department
- young adults
- sleep quality
- risk assessment
- human health
- high resolution
- artificial intelligence
- quality improvement
- smoking cessation
- drug induced