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July 31, 2018
Early family experience affects later romantic relationships
At a Glance
- Young adults who were raised in a positive family climate with聽effective parenting聽were more likely to have healthy romantic relationships.
- The findings give insights into how parenting techniques affect children鈥檚 interpersonal skills later in life.
Learning how to form and sustain happy and healthy romantic relationships is a key skill for young adults. Such relationships are based on feelings of love, effective problem-solving, and the absence of physical and verbal violence. The ability to develop a healthy relationship can be influenced by the experiences people have had within their own families. However, the ways in which the family environment influences interpersonal skills and romantic relationships aren鈥檛 well understood.
A team of researchers led by Penn State graduate student Mengya Xia set out to explore how interpersonal skills and family factors affect romantic relationships. They examined data from聽a long-term study on preventing substance use among more than 10,000 youths in rural and semi-rural communities in Pennsylvania and Iowa. A聽randomly selected set of nearly 2,000聽participated聽in a聽later follow-up project when they were young adults.聽For this聽analysis, the team included the 974 participants聽between 18 and 21 years old who were in a steady romantic relationship. The study was supported by NIH鈥檚 最新麻豆视频 Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) and 最新麻豆视频 Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD). The results were published in the July 2018 issue of Journal of Youth and Adolescence.
The participants were surveyed four times. In grades 6, 7, and聽9, they were asked about their assertiveness, positive engagement with their families, family climate, and effectiveness of their parents鈥 discipline methods. When they were between 18 and 21, they were asked to rate the violence levels, problem-solving skills, and amount of love they felt in their romantic relationships.
The researchers found that young adults from families that were cohesive, organized, and without much conflict were less likely to be in romantic relationships with violence or poor problem-solving. However, neither the family climate nor the parenting practices were linked to feelings of love in the relationships.
Family factors also seemed to affect specific interpersonal skills. More effective parenting and a positive family climate appeared to increase the participants鈥 assertiveness鈥攖he ability to respectfully advocate for their needs in a relationship and have positive interactions with their families.
The influences seemed to go both ways. Participants who had positive family engagement at the start of the study reported later in childhood that they聽experienced more effective parenting. Assertiveness in childhood also predicted later reports of more effective parenting but did not affect family climate.
This study suggests that adolescents who grow up in positive family climates with effective parenting are more likely to have healthy romantic relationships as young adults. In addition, adolescents who are more assertive and behave positively with their families also help create a positive family climate.聽
鈥淭he family relationship is the first intimate relationship of your life, and you apply what you learn to later relationships,鈥 Xia says. 鈥淚t's also where you may learn how to constructively communicate鈥攐r perhaps the inverse, to yell and scream鈥攚hen you have a disagreement.鈥
A better understanding of the family dynamics that affect adult interactions could lead to more effective strategies for improving romantic relationships. However, this study included mostly white families in rural and semi-rural areas鈥攁nd also more females participated than males. More diverse populations will be needed to confirm and expand on the findings.
鈥攂y Claire Rutkowski
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References: .聽 Xia M, Fosco GM, Lippold MA, Feinberg ME. J Youth Adolesc. 2018 Jul;47(7):1499-1516. doi: 10.1007/s10964-018-0815-8. Epub 2018 Feb 13. PMID: 29435787.
Funding: NIH鈥檚 最新麻豆视频 Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) and 最新麻豆视频 Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD); and the Karl R. and Diane Wendle Fink Early Career Professorship for the Study of Families.