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A network approach to parental burnout.

M Annelise Blanchard1, Isabelle Roskam1, Moïra Mikolajczak1

  • 1Psychological Sciences Research Institute, UCLouvain, Belgium.

Child Abuse & Neglect
|December 14, 2020
PubMed
Summary

Emotional distance is key in parental burnout, driving exhaustion and ineffectiveness. Network analysis reveals this critical link, suggesting it as a target for interventions to improve family well-being.

Keywords:
Directed acyclic graphNeglectNetwork analysisParental burnoutParental conflictsViolence

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Area of Science:

  • Psychology
  • Network Science
  • Family Studies

Background:

  • Network analyses are increasingly used in psychology to understand complex interactions.
  • A network perspective views psychological constructs as dynamic systems of interacting elements.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To apply network analyses to examine the interactions between parental burnout features and maladaptive behaviors.
  • To investigate how exhaustion, emotional distancing, and ineffectiveness in the parental role interconnect.
  • To explore the relationship between parental burnout and partner/child-related maladaptive behaviors within a network system.

Main Methods:

  • Reanalyzed data from a French-speaking sample (n=1551).
  • Utilized graphical Gaussian models to assess network structure, communities, and influential nodes.
  • Employed directed acyclic graphs to determine probabilistic dependencies among variables.

Main Results:

  • Network models identified emotional distance as a potent mechanism activating other burnout-related variables.
  • Emotional distance was found to be critical in maintaining the parental burnout network.

Conclusions:

  • Emotional distance is a key target for interventions in parental burnout.
  • Network analysis effectively reveals the structure and relationships within parental burnout and its consequences.