Positive parent-child interactions moderate certain maltreatment effects on psychosocial well-being in 6-year-old children.
Wenjie ShanYunting ZhangJin ZhaoSaishuang WuLi ZhaoPatrick IpJoseph D TuckerFan JiangPublished in: Pediatric research (2023)
It provides the first data on the prevalence of different single types and combinations of maltreatment in early childhood in Shanghai, China by drawing on a city-level population-representative sample. It adds to evidence that different forms and degrees of maltreatment were all associated with a higher risk of psychosocial problems in early childhood. Among them, sexual abuse posed the highest risk, followed by emotional abuse. It innovatively found that higher frequencies of parent-child interactions may provide buffering effects only to children who are exposed to occasional physical abuse. It provides a potential intervention opportunity, especially for physically abused children.