Status and influence of parental rearing style and social psychology process on social adaptability of medical students: using college students in Jilin Province, China, as an example
Juan Du, Hongjuan Ge, Wei Nie, Xinrui Feng, Bing Shao

TL;DR
This study explores how parental rearing styles and social psychology factors affect the social adaptability of medical students in China.
Contribution
The study identifies specific parental rearing styles and social psychology factors that influence social adaptability in Chinese medical students.
Findings
Social distress and avoidance significantly negatively affect social adaptability.
Parental emotional warmth and overprotection are key factors influencing social adaptability.
Mediation analysis shows these rearing styles affect adaptability through social avoidance and distress.
Abstract
Although social adaptability is crucial for medical students, the combined influence of parental rearing styles and social psychology process on this competency is not well-explored, particularly in the context of China. This study examines their status and relationships among Chinese medical students. An online questionnaire survey based on the web-based survey platform “Questionnaire Star” was performed with medical college students in Jilin Province, China. The questionnaire content comprised the status of the participants' parental rearing style, social avoidance and distress, and social adaptability by employing specific survey scales, and mediation effect analysis was conducted to examine the mediating role of social psychology process in the relationship between parental rearing styles and social adaptability. Two thousand hundred and sixty-six medical college students were…
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Taxonomy
TopicsChild and Adolescent Psychosocial and Emotional Development · School Health and Nursing Education · Early Childhood Education and Development
