
The purpose of this study was to examine what aspects of the mother-child relationship are measured by the Nursing Child Assessment Teaching Scale (NCATS). A racially heterogeneous sample of 128 mothers completed questionnaires measuring maternal depression, parenting self-efficacy, knowledge of developmental and parenting principles, and perceived difficult toddler temperament. Mothers and children were also videotaped during home visits while completing two teaching tasks that were later scored using NCATS. NCATS Parent subscale scores were significantly related to maternal knowledge and education but unrelated to depression and self-efficacy. Child subscale scores were unrelated to all of the study variables, including perceived difficult temperament. Significant differences were noted among African-American, Hispanic, and white mothers. The findings suggest that the NCATS taps cognitive factors more reliably than affective factors underlying the mother-child relationship and the cognitive factors may be culturally biased.
Adult, Male, Analysis of Variance, Depressive Disorder, Cultural Characteristics, Mothers, Hispanic or Latino, Mother-Child Relations, Black or African American, Affect, Child Development, Bias, Nursing Evaluation Research, Child, Preschool, Educational Status, Humans, Female, Maternal Behavior, Nursing Assessment, Maternal-Child Nursing
Adult, Male, Analysis of Variance, Depressive Disorder, Cultural Characteristics, Mothers, Hispanic or Latino, Mother-Child Relations, Black or African American, Affect, Child Development, Bias, Nursing Evaluation Research, Child, Preschool, Educational Status, Humans, Female, Maternal Behavior, Nursing Assessment, Maternal-Child Nursing
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