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Articles

Teenage parenthood and child externalising and internalising problems: evidence from the ‘Growing Up in Ireland’ study

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Pages 39-52 | Received 05 Jul 2013, Accepted 22 Sep 2015, Published online: 22 Jul 2016
 

Abstract

Previous research has suggested that the children of teenage parents are at a high risk of developing both internalising and externalising behaviour disorders. The current study aimed to explore pathways through which children of teenage mothers show more externalising and internalising psychopathology than their peers whose parents were older. The present study used data from the first wave of the ‘Growing Up in Ireland’ 9-year-old cohort and employed structural equation modelling to assess the explanatory value of a model informed by previous research findings. Goodness-of-fit indices indicated that many aspects of the familial environment of Irish teenage families did indeed place children at a substantial risk of problematic developmental outcomes. In particular, the results implicated the influential power of economic stability and familial conflict on the well-being of teenage families and related child outcomes, results similar to those reported in international studies.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

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