Examining the relationship between childhood parentification, cultural orientation, and parenting behaviours in female primary caregivers
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Lethbridge, Alta. : University of Lethbridge, Faculty of Education
Abstract
Parentification is the phenomenon whereby children take on roles and responsibilities
within their family that are typically reserved for adults, such as providing emotional or physical
care for their parents or siblings. In this study, 70 female primary caregivers completed online
questionnaires that measured parentification in childhood, cultural orientation, and parenting
behaviours. Female primary caregivers who identified as individualists reported higher levels of
instrumental parentification in childhood than those who identified as collectivists. Correlation
analysis showed no strong or consistent relationships with parenting behaviours, but exploratory
subscale findings suggest that perceived unfairness of parentification relates to fewer positive
parenting practices. Furthermore, cultural orientation showed some direct effects on parenting
behaviours. Using thematic analysis, the researcher created nine themes to capture the qualitative
data from the short answer questions. Overall, parentification and the emerging area of the
intergenerational transmission of parentification call for the attention of mental health, education,
and family support systems to recognize parentification as a relational and cultural phenomenon
with profound implications.