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Family size and psychological functioning in the Orthodox Jewish community

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2015

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Informa UK Limited
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Pirutinsky, Steven, Issac Schechter, Ariel Kor, and David Rosmarin. 2015. “Family Size and Psychological Functioning in the Orthodox Jewish Community.” Mental Health, Religion & Culture 18 (3) (March 16): 218–230. doi:10.1080/13674676.2015.1042851.

Abstract

Caring for children is a known psychosocial stressor; however, its effects on psychological functioning may have substantial cross-cultural variance. We explored relationships between family size and a variety of psychological outcomes among Orthodox Jews in four separate studies: (1) an international treatment-seeking sample (n = 82), (2) a community sample from Canada (n = 226), (3) an out-patient clinical sample from greater New York (n = 82), and (4) a large dyadic sample of Israeli couples (n = 789). Surprisingly, results suggested that family size was not associated with greater stress, anxiety, depression, global functioning, family functioning, family communication, family satisfaction, or even parenting stress. It is possible that the high religious value placed on family life as well as structural adaptions in families buffer against potential stressors associated with child rearing, and further research on these potential effects is warranted.

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Orthodox, Jewish, family, children, stress

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