Title of article :
Do mother-child conversations about safety differ in middle- and low-income families?
Author/Authors :
O’Neal, Elizabeth E Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences - University of Iowa - Iowa City, USA , Plumert, Jodie M Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences - University of Iowa - Iowa City, USA
Abstract :
Background: Children from low-income families experience a disproportionate number of
unintentional injuries compared to their middle-income peers. Parents are well positioned to teach
children about avoiding injury, yet little is known about parent-child safety conversations in
low-income families. This study examined to what extent mother-child safety conversations differ
between low- and middle-income families.
Methods: Mothers and their 8- to 10-year-old children from low- and middle-income families
discussed and rated the safety of photos showing another child engaged in potentially dangerous
activities.
Results: Dyads disagreed over safety ratings on a third of trials, and both middle- and
low-income mothers were highly successful in resolving disagreements in their favor.
Middle-income mothers justified their ratings by referring to almost twice as many dangerous
features than outcomes, whereas low-income mothers generated roughly equal numbers of
dangerous features and outcomes. Middle-income children did not differ in their references to
dangerous features and outcomes, but low-income children focused heavily on dangerous
outcomes relative to dangerous features.
Conclusions: Describing how middle- and low-income families discuss safety is a first step in
understanding whether similarities and differences contribute to how middle- and low-income
children evaluate and navigate potentially dangerous situations.
Keywords :
Mother-child communication , Unintentional childhood injuries , Injury prevention , Low-income families
Journal title :
Journal of Injury and Violence Research