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stress and aggravation in parents are associated
with poor cognitive and socioemotional
development of young children. In addition,
maternal emotional distress has been linked to
less responsive, even hostile, parenting
practices. Mandated
employment, time limits on benefits, shifts in
child care arrangements, and fluctuations in
income are some of the challenges facing
low-income parents under welfare reform. The
added stress of these challenges may increase
parental aggravation. However, work experiences
that provide opportunities for social
interaction, support outside the family, and
economic self-sufficiency may reduce stress and
hence parental aggravation.
Aggravation was assessed on
a scale that summed a parent's estimates of how
often in the last month he or she felt a child
was much harder to care for than most, the child
did things that really bothered the parent a lot,
the parent was giving up more of his or her life
to meet the child's needs than expected, and the
parent felt angry with the child.
Nationally, 9 percent of
all children lived with a parent who felt highly
aggravated. Of children in families with low
incomes (below 200 percent of the poverty level),
14 percent lived with such a parent, compared to
6 percent of children in families with higher
incomes, a statistically significant difference.
Children of parents who did not have a spouse
were significantly more likely than other
children (16 percent versus 7 percent) to be
living with a highly aggravated parent.
In the 13 states surveyed,
6 percent to 14 percent of children lived with a
highly aggravated parent. In six of the states,
the percentage was above the national average:
Alabama, Florida, Mississippi, New Jersey, New
York, and Texas. The percentage was below average
in Colorado, Minnesota, and Washington.
In low-income families, 9
percent to 21 percent of children lived with a
highly aggravated parent. In five states, that
percentage was higher than the national average:
Florida, Massachusetts, Mississippi, New Jersey,
and New York. In Colorado and Washington, it was
lower.
In low-income families
where the parent did not have a spouse, 13
percent to 26 percent of children lived with a
highly aggravated parent. In three states, the
percentage was above the national average of 18
percent: Mississippi, New Jersey, and New York;
in Colorado, it was below average.
This four-item scale was
adapted from a component of the National
Evaluation of Welfare-to-Work Strategies (NEWWS),
the evaluation of the Job Opportunities and Basic
Skills (JOBS) program.
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