Parent-child communication about substance use, puberty, sex, and social media use among Hispanic parents and pre-adolescent children.
Yui MatsudaRoxana Delcampo ThalasinosAlexa ParraRoberto L Roman LaporteMaria A Mejia-BoteroAbgail L AderaMelody SilesGerardo R LazaroRonak N VenkataJoseph P De SantisPublished in: PloS one (2023)
The themes that emerged from the interviews were about children's feelings, parents' feelings, communication messages that children received from their parents, and information parents provided to their children during parent-child communication. The results indicate discrepancies between information that parents provided and information that the pre-adolescents reported. The results have implications for healthcare providers in that parents need to be better educated on communicating effectively with their pre-adolescents about risk-taking behaviors. Healthcare providers may help facilitate parent-child communication with Hispanic families. More research is needed to develop intervention programs for Hispanic parents to learn how to effectively communicate with their pre-adolescent children in a developmentally appropriate manner.