The relationship between children’s rumination and parental rumination, worry and depressive symptoms
J. Szőke, M. Klein, Á. Örkényi, G. Kökönyei

TL;DR
This study explores how children's rumination relates to their parents' rumination, worry, and depression, finding little connection but a weak link to psychosomatic symptoms.
Contribution
The study contributes by examining rumination in children and its links to parental mental health and health complaints.
Findings
Children's rumination was not significantly associated with parental rumination, worry, or depressive symptoms.
Psychosomatic complaints in children showed a weak positive link to parental depressive symptoms.
Rumination frequency in children was significantly associated with psychosomatic symptoms after controlling for age and sex.
Abstract
Rumination is a transdiagnostic phenomenon that is linked to psychological and physical symptoms not only in adulthood but also in childhood. Several distal and proximal factors are believed to underlie the development of ruminative tendencies, with parental characteristics and modelling being among those with a potential association with the increased levels of children’s rumination. The primary aim of the study was to investigate the link between rumination in children and parental functioning, including rumination, worry and depressive symptoms. Additionally, we aimed to test the association between rumination and psychological and somatic health in a sample of healthy children and early adolescents. 153 children (87 girls, mean age = 10.74; SD = 0.91 years) and their parents (130 females, mean age = 42.65; SD = 4.08 years) participated in the study. For children, Kid Rumination…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPsychosocial Factors Impacting Youth · Perfectionism, Procrastination, Anxiety Studies · Healthcare Education and Workforce Issues
