scholarly journals The positive and negative effects of WeChat on parent-child relationship maintenance

2021 ◽  
Vol 8 (11) ◽  
Author(s):  
Yiwen Wu ◽  
Yiqiu YIN

WeChat has been deeply involved in every aspect of Chinese people’s life, and has exerted great influence on the Chinese family and parent-child relationship.This paper discusses the effects of WeChat on Chinese family stability, consumption pattern, family function, parent-child relationship and other aspects through interviews and literature review.The results show that WeChat has both positive and negative effects on the Chinese family and parent-child relationship.The negative effect of WeChat should arouse the great attention of technical developers and sociologists so that a good balance between the application and restriction of WeChat can be achieved.

2019 ◽  
Vol 3 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. S895-S895
Author(s):  
Ayako Baba

Abstract OBJECTIVE: Long-term caregiver (child)/care-recipient (parent) relationships have both positive and negative effects on care. However, the mechanism of that impact is unclear. This study aimed to explore how parent–child relationships affect care and which aspects cause those effects. METHOD: Five hundred thirty-four adult children who were caring for or had cared for their parents at home completed the scales of parent–child psychological independence, the acceptance of care, care attitude, and care burden. Data were analyzed using a pass analysis with multiple group structural equation modeling to identify the relationship between parent–child psychological independence, acceptance of care, care attitude, and care burden, and the care dyad difference of the models. RESULT: 1) “Reliable relationship with parent” in parent–child psychological independence affected “resignation” and “understanding actively” in acceptance of care. 2) “Psychological individuation from the parent” in parent–child independence affected all subscales of care attitudes. 3) “Resistance” and “understanding actively” in acceptance of care and “auto-pilot” in care attitude affected care burden. 4) In mother–daughter caregiving, “resistance” and “resignation” had stronger effects on “auto-pilot” whereas “utilization of resource” and “flexible response” in care attitude and “resistance” had weaker effects on care burden. CONCLUSION: The relationship between long-term parent–child relationship and care were revealed. In some points, daughters who were caring for or had cared for their mothers had a different model from other care dyads. These results suggest that child caregivers should be supported mentally in accordance to their difficult points and dyads.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Muthanna Samara ◽  
Adeem Ahmad Massarwi ◽  
Aiman El-Asam ◽  
Sara Hammuda ◽  
Peter K. Smith ◽  
...  

Over the last decade, research into the negative effects of problematic internet use has greatly increased. The current study adopted a mediation-moderation model in exploring the relationship between problematic internet use and substance abuse (drinking, drug use, and smoking tobacco cigarettes) among 1,613 adolescents (aged 10–16) in the UK. The findings of the study revealed a significant positive correlation between problematic internet use and substance abuse, which is mediated by traditional and cyber bullying and victimisation. Furthermore, the parent–child relationship was found to be a protective factor that moderated the correlation between problematic internet use and substance abuse and the correlation between problematic internet use and traditional bullying. The study emphasises the critical need to reduce problematic internet use among adolescents as a risk factor for involvement in bullying as perpetrators and victims, in addition to substance abuse. Furthermore, the findings of the study highlight the importance of a good parent–child relationship as a protective factor among adolescents. In light of the findings of the study, interventions for reducing problematic internet use taking into account bullying and the parent–child relationship are needed among adolescents.


2021 ◽  
pp. 014303432110392
Author(s):  
Fanchang Kong ◽  
Guofeng Liu ◽  
Qiufeng Gao ◽  
Jianjun Deng

Problematic mobile phone use can predict depression in adolescents, but few studies have thoroughly explored its internal mechanism. This study surveyed 1,768 Chinese adolescents in three educational levels (upper grades of elementary, junior middle, and high school levels) using a questionnaire. Results showed that (1) problematic mobile phone use significantly positively predicted adolescents’ depression after controlling for gender and age, (2) parent–child relationship played a mediating role between problematic mobile phone use and adolescents’ depression, and (3) adolescents’ educational level moderated relationships between problematic mobile phone use and parent–child relationship as well as parent–child relationship and depression. The negative effect of problematic mobile phone use on the parent–child relationship and the impact of the parent–child relationship on depression are weakened as the educational level of adolescents increases. These findings indicated that problematic mobile phone use affects adolescents’ depression by reducing the quality of parent–child relationship, wherein the degree of influence reduces at high educational levels. Limitations and future directions of this study were also discussed.


2016 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-18
Author(s):  
Ann Buysse

Bij gezinstransities moeten grenzen, samenlevingsvormen en rollen heronderhandeld worden. Dat gaat vaak niet vanzelf. Niet in het minst omdat er geen universele norm voor bestaat. Een aantal decennia geleden was scheiding uitzonderlijk en moeilijk zodat het wel vaker aanleiding gaf tot een gevecht met lange, aversieve gerechtelijke procedures waarin ook kinderen en ouder – kind relaties meegezogen werden. In die context ontstond vanuit klinische observatie het begrip ouderverstoting. Wetenschappelijke evidentie is er niet. Oorspronkelijk gezien als een syndroom binnen een zuiver lineair, individueel en categoriaal denken onderging het begrip dan ook verschillende transities.In deze bijdrage bespreken we de ouder ‐ kind relatie en het begrip ‘ouderverstoting’ in de ondertussen ten gunste veranderde maatschappelijke context met een meer gender‐neutraal opvoedingsklimaat en een meer tolerante houding ten aanzien van scheiding en ‘andere gezinnen’. Ook nu is er geen universele norm voor ouder – kind relaties (na scheiding). Er zijn vele manieren om ouder te zijn en vele manieren om kind te zijn en de ouder ‐ kind relatie is te begrijpen binnen een complex samenspel van kwetsbaarheden van gezinsleden en gezinsrelaties. Een vertroebelde ouder – kind relatie met afwijzing kan oneindig veel betekenissen hebben en enkel de gezinsleden zijn hier eigenaar van. In functie van de context, de betekenisverlening en de vraag kan professioneel worden tussengekomen. Het gaat om het regelen van familiezaken met respect en aandacht voor familierelaties. Dit vergt een multidisciplinaire aanpak, met interprofessionele samenwerking. In de bijdrage doe ik enkele suggesties hiertoe. Abstract : Family transitions require a reorganization and re‐negotiation of boundaries and family roles. As there are no ‘standards’ for living in a post‐divorce family, this can be difficult. A few decades ago, divorce was rare and difficult. It often led to fights with long aversive court proceedings with negative effects on children and parent‐child relationships. Within this context, the notion of a parent alienation syndrome was described based on clinical observation. There is no scientific evidence to back‐up this clinical observation that rooted in purely linear, individual and categorical thinking. The concept of parent alienation has been the subject of strong debates. In this article I discuss the parent ‐ child relationship and the concept of parent alienation within the present societal context with more gender‐neutral parenting roles and a more tolerant attitude towards divorce and ‘other families’. I take a systemic perspective. There are many ways to be a parent and many ways to be a child and the parent ‐ child relationship can only be understood within the context of a complex interplay of family members’ strength and vulnerabilities as well as characteristics of family relationships. A distorted parent-child relationship can have many different meanings and only family members can give meaning to what exactly rejection means within a parent ‐ child relationship. I give some suggestions for how professionals could intervene in family matters and family relationships with a strong plea for a multidisciplinary approach.


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