Longitudinal associations between family dinner and adolescent perceptions of parent–child communication among racially diverse urban youth.
Abstract
We examined changes in adolescent self-reported parent-child communication using growth curve models conditional on family meal frequency over a 3.5-year period among a population of racially diverse, low-income adolescents from an urban environment (n = 4,750). Results indicated that although both family dinner frequency and adolescent perceptions of parent-child communication scores were characterized by negative linear growth over time (both...
Paper Details
Title
Longitudinal associations between family dinner and adolescent perceptions of parent–child communication among racially diverse urban youth.
Published Date
Jan 1, 2010
Journal
Volume
24
Issue
3
Pages
261 - 270
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