# Using Ecological Momentary Assessment to Assess Family Functioning in Spanish-Speaking Parent and Adolescent Dyads: Daily Questionnaire Study

**Authors:** Alejandra Fernandez, Savannah Bernal, Lana Kim, Subodh Potla

PMC · DOI: 10.2196/60073 · JMIR Formative Research · 2025-06-11

## TL;DR

This study shows that daily assessments using an app can effectively capture family functioning in Spanish-speaking parent-teen pairs, revealing differences in how parents and teens view their family dynamics.

## Contribution

The study introduces the use of Ecological Momentary Assessment (EMA) in primarily Spanish-speaking parent-adolescent dyads to capture real-time family functioning.

## Key findings

- EMA was feasible and acceptable, with a 90% response rate for daily assessments in a 7-day protocol.
- Adolescents showed higher variability in family functioning reports compared to parents.
- EMA revealed individualized patterns in how parents and adolescents perceive family functioning.

## Abstract

Family functioning is associated with several adolescent health outcomes, and many family-based interventions (FBIs) exist to improve family functioning. However, most FBIs assess family functioning retrospectively at baseline and post intervention, thereby overlooking the daily fluctuations in family functioning throughout the intervention. Ecological momentary assessment (EMA) is a method involving a high frequency of assessments and has been underused to assess family functioning across parent and adolescent dyads. Further, limited research exists on the use of EMA in bilingual populations.

The purpose of this study was to assess an EMA protocol’s feasibility and acceptability and to analyze within-person and between-person variance in family functioning reports in a sample of primarily Spanish-speaking parent and adolescent dyads.

Participants completed a baseline assessment (including demographics and family functioning assessment), a 7-day protocol with a once-daily family assessment questionnaire using an EMA app, and an acceptability questionnaire at the conclusion of the study.

We recruited 7 mothers (mean age 37.29, SD 3.82 years) and 8 adolescents (n=7, 88% females; mean age 11.86, SD 1.07 years) who identified themselves as Hispanic/Latinx. The participants showed overall satisfaction with the EMA protocol. The daily assessments were completed relatively quickly (mean 3 minutes and 16 seconds, SD 11 minutes and 5 seconds) after the prompt notification was received, and the response rate across the daily assessments was 90% (87/97). The reported family functioning was relatively high across both adolescents (mean 4.57) and parents (mean 4.59). The variance across adolescents (SD 0.459) was larger than that within their individual reports of family functioning (SD 0.122). Alternatively, the variance across parents was smaller (SD 0.132) than that reported among parents’ individual reports of family functioning (SD 0.286). Our findings highlight the heterogeneity between adolescent and parent responses. Finally, the visual inspection of data underscored the individualized patterns and reported differences in the family functioning reports across parents and adolescents.

Our findings emphasize the value of EMA in studying family (eg, adolescent-caregiver) behaviors. EMA’s ability to capture immediate experiences presents a nuanced picture of daily interactions and offers suggestions for practice when using the EMA methodology in populations such as the one included in this study (ie, primarily Spanish-speaking parent-adolescent dyads).

## Full-text entities

- **Genes:** MUC1 (mucin 1, cell surface associated) [NCBI Gene 4582] {aka ADMCKD, ADMCKD1, ADTKD2, CA 15-3, CD227, Ca15-3}
- **Diseases:** REDCap (MESH:D014947)
- **Chemicals:** lead (MESH:D007854)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

27 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12176312/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12176312