Impacts of Parental Locus of Control on Indigenous Sami and Non-Sami Children’s Mental Health and Well-being in Norway
Background: Existing research overemphasizes issues of substance use and suicide in Indigenous populations, failing to address the key factors influencing Indigenous child mental health and well-being within the household. This study seeks to examine the impacts of parental locus of control (PLOC) o...
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Other Authors: | , |
Format: | Thesis |
Language: | English |
Published: |
2023
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Online Access: | http://hdl.handle.net/11375/29166 |
_version_ | 1821698044091957248 |
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author | Antony, Celina |
author2 | Drossos, Alexander Global Health |
author_facet | Antony, Celina |
author_sort | Antony, Celina |
collection | MacSphere (McMaster University) |
description | Background: Existing research overemphasizes issues of substance use and suicide in Indigenous populations, failing to address the key factors influencing Indigenous child mental health and well-being within the household. This study seeks to examine the impacts of parental locus of control (PLOC) on child mental health and well-being among Sami and non-Sami children in Norway. Methodology: Analyses of data from the Norwegian Mother and Child Cohort Study were conducted in three phases: 1) a cross-tabulation analysis examining the differences in PLOC between Sami and non-Sami parents, with a consideration for the child’s sex assigned at birth; 2) a multiple linear regression investigating how demographic, psychosocial, and cultural factors influence PLOC; and 3) a multiple linear regression assessing how PLOC affects mental health and well-being among Sami and non-Sami children in Norway, with a consideration for the child’s cultural context and sex assigned at birth. Results: Although both groups leaned more towards internal PLOC overall, Sami mothers remained closer to external PLOC than non-Sami mothers. One of four items measuring maternal depression and three of four items measuring maternal self-esteem were statistically significant predictors of PLOC. PLOC was found to be a statistically significant indicator of children’s emotionality at 3 and 5 years, and sociability at 3 years. Children’s sex assigned at birth was a statistically significant predictor of shyness at 3 years, with boys experiencing higher levels of shyness than girls. Conclusion: Cultural distinctions, sex and gender, and maternal self-esteem play a crucial role in the child-rearing approaches employed and their effectiveness in promoting children’s social and emotional development in Norway. Research examining the association between maternal mental health and child-rearing approaches, as well as the impacts of PLOC on other aspects of children’s mental health and well-being, is necessary to inform mental health and social supports for ... |
format | Thesis |
genre | sami sami |
genre_facet | sami sami |
geographic | Norway |
geographic_facet | Norway |
id | ftmcmaster:oai:macsphere.mcmaster.ca:11375/29166 |
institution | Open Polar |
language | English |
op_collection_id | ftmcmaster |
op_relation | http://hdl.handle.net/11375/29166 |
publishDate | 2023 |
record_format | openpolar |
spelling | ftmcmaster:oai:macsphere.mcmaster.ca:11375/29166 2025-01-17T00:34:37+00:00 Impacts of Parental Locus of Control on Indigenous Sami and Non-Sami Children’s Mental Health and Well-being in Norway Antony, Celina Drossos, Alexander Global Health 2023 http://hdl.handle.net/11375/29166 en eng http://hdl.handle.net/11375/29166 Indigenous Sami child mental health well-being child-rearing parental locus of control culture Norway Thesis 2023 ftmcmaster 2023-11-25T23:48:18Z Background: Existing research overemphasizes issues of substance use and suicide in Indigenous populations, failing to address the key factors influencing Indigenous child mental health and well-being within the household. This study seeks to examine the impacts of parental locus of control (PLOC) on child mental health and well-being among Sami and non-Sami children in Norway. Methodology: Analyses of data from the Norwegian Mother and Child Cohort Study were conducted in three phases: 1) a cross-tabulation analysis examining the differences in PLOC between Sami and non-Sami parents, with a consideration for the child’s sex assigned at birth; 2) a multiple linear regression investigating how demographic, psychosocial, and cultural factors influence PLOC; and 3) a multiple linear regression assessing how PLOC affects mental health and well-being among Sami and non-Sami children in Norway, with a consideration for the child’s cultural context and sex assigned at birth. Results: Although both groups leaned more towards internal PLOC overall, Sami mothers remained closer to external PLOC than non-Sami mothers. One of four items measuring maternal depression and three of four items measuring maternal self-esteem were statistically significant predictors of PLOC. PLOC was found to be a statistically significant indicator of children’s emotionality at 3 and 5 years, and sociability at 3 years. Children’s sex assigned at birth was a statistically significant predictor of shyness at 3 years, with boys experiencing higher levels of shyness than girls. Conclusion: Cultural distinctions, sex and gender, and maternal self-esteem play a crucial role in the child-rearing approaches employed and their effectiveness in promoting children’s social and emotional development in Norway. Research examining the association between maternal mental health and child-rearing approaches, as well as the impacts of PLOC on other aspects of children’s mental health and well-being, is necessary to inform mental health and social supports for ... Thesis sami sami MacSphere (McMaster University) Norway |
spellingShingle | Indigenous Sami child mental health well-being child-rearing parental locus of control culture Norway Antony, Celina Impacts of Parental Locus of Control on Indigenous Sami and Non-Sami Children’s Mental Health and Well-being in Norway |
title | Impacts of Parental Locus of Control on Indigenous Sami and Non-Sami Children’s Mental Health and Well-being in Norway |
title_full | Impacts of Parental Locus of Control on Indigenous Sami and Non-Sami Children’s Mental Health and Well-being in Norway |
title_fullStr | Impacts of Parental Locus of Control on Indigenous Sami and Non-Sami Children’s Mental Health and Well-being in Norway |
title_full_unstemmed | Impacts of Parental Locus of Control on Indigenous Sami and Non-Sami Children’s Mental Health and Well-being in Norway |
title_short | Impacts of Parental Locus of Control on Indigenous Sami and Non-Sami Children’s Mental Health and Well-being in Norway |
title_sort | impacts of parental locus of control on indigenous sami and non-sami children’s mental health and well-being in norway |
topic | Indigenous Sami child mental health well-being child-rearing parental locus of control culture Norway |
topic_facet | Indigenous Sami child mental health well-being child-rearing parental locus of control culture Norway |
url | http://hdl.handle.net/11375/29166 |