Parent-child perceptions of parental behavioral control through rule-setting for risky health choices during adolescence Journal Article


Authors: Baxter, Leslie A.; Bylund, Carma L.; Imes, Rebecca; Routsong, Tracy
Article Title: Parent-child perceptions of parental behavioral control through rule-setting for risky health choices during adolescence
Abstract: This study of 164 parent-child dyads compared perceptions of the rule-setting processes during the child's adolescence surrounding reported rules for the risky health domains of sexual activity, alcohol use, and tobacco use. Two kinds of rules were identified: abstinence rules and contingency rules. Tobacco use was largely dominated by abstinence rules, whereas sexual activity and alcohol featured both abstinence and contingency rules. Parents perceived that they communicated rules more directly and with greater justification than their adolescents reported, especially for abstinence rules. Parents perceived that their adolescents complied with their rules more so than the adolescents reported complying, especially for abstinence rules. Across health domains, perceptions of rule justification and rule sanctioning predicted perceptions of adolescent rule compliance. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved) (journal abstract).
Keywords: adolescence; parent-child perceptions; parental behavioral control; rule-setting; risky health choices; sexual activity; alcohol use; tobacco use
Journal Title: Journal of Family Communication
Volume: 9
Issue: 4
ISSN: 1526-7431
Publisher: Taylor & Francis Group  
Date Published: 2009-10-01
Start Page: 251
End Page: 271
Language: English
ACCESSION: Peer Reviewed Journal: 2010-12282-004
PROVIDER: Ovid Technologies
DOI: 10.1080/15267430903255920
PROVIDER: psycinfo
DOI/URL:
Notes: --- - References - "Source: PsycINFO"
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