REACHING OUT WITH UNIVERSAL PARENTAL SUPPORT
Abstract
The overarching aim of this thesis was to explore the general interest in universal parental support, the circumstances under which this interest is stronger, and how universal support groups for parents of adolescents could be developed according to those parents’ perceived needs. Study I examined parents´ interest in municipal parental support. The results showed that mothers were more interested than fathers in all forms of parental support except a webpage, and that frequent use of the Internet as a source of parenting information was associated with high interest in parental support. Study II explored interest in existing and possible uni-versal parental support in parents of adolescents compared with parents of younger children. About 82% of the parents of adolescents inter-viewed considered universal parental support most important during the child’s adolescence. There was substantial interest, in most forms of support. Despite their interest, parents had limited awareness of available support. Study III explored the factors associated with interest in univer-sal parental support and found it was linked to parents’ own anxious mood, lower perceived parental capacity, perception of their child as having psychiatric problems, perception of their adolescents’ openness about things, and perception of their adolescent’s overall difficulties in daily life due to psychiatric symptoms. Study IV explored what kind of support parents of adolescents’ request from universal parent support groups and what practical requirements would enable parents to partici-pate. Parents could give each other emotional support and develop better parenting skills together. Reaching out with support universally requires that various information channels be utilized to reach out to all parents regardless of gender and social status, and various forms of support be offered. The Internet is an important but challenging information chan-nel for reaching out to parents, especially fathers. Supports should be developed that are targeted to parents of adolescents, tailored to their needs, and well-advertised. Schools are important arenas for offering universal parental supports such as support groups moderated by trained professionals. Lighter support forms should be accompanied by more resource-demanding forms of support. to prevent increasing inequalities between parents with different social situations.
Parts of work
I. Thorslund, K., Johansson Hanse, J., & Axberg, U. (2014). Universal parental support-How to reach out: a cross-sectional random sample of Swedish parents. BMC Public Health, 14(1064), 1-8. DOI: ::doi::10.1186/1471-2458-14-1064 II. Thorslund, K., Johansson Hanse, J., & Axberg, U. (2017). Do parents of adolescents request the same universal parental support as parents of younger children? A random sample of Swedish parents. Scandinavian Journal of Public Health, 45(5), 492-502. DOI: ::doi::10.1177/1403494817705233 III. Thorslund, K., Alfredsson, E. K., & Axberg, U. (2018). Universal parental support for parents of adolescents: Who wants municipality-based parental support and in what form? Scandinavian Journal of Psychology, 60(1), 16-25. DOI: ::doi::10.1111/sjop.12498 IV. Thorslund, K., Axberg, U., & Boström, P.K. Universal support groups for parents of adolescents – a thematic analysis of parents’ requests in terms of content and form. Unpublished manuscript.
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy
University
Göteborgs universitet. Samhällsvetenskapliga fakulteten
University of Gothenburg. Faculty of Social Sciences
Institution
Department of Psychology ; Psykologiska institutionen
Disputation
Fredagen den 24 maj 2019, kl. 14, föreläsningssal 1, Psykologiska institutionen, Haraldsgatan 1.
Date of defence
2019-05-24
karin.thorslund@socwork.gu.se
Date
2019-04-30Author
Thorslund, Karin
Keywords
Universal prevention
Promotion
Parenting
Parental support
Parental engagement
Adolescence
Adolescent mental health
Family services
Publication type
Doctoral thesis
ISBN
978-91-7833-431-5 (PDF)
978-91-7833-430-8 (Print)
ISSN
1101-718X
Series/Report no.
Doctoral Dissertation
Language
eng