Parental stress and dyadic consensus in early parenthood among mothers and fathers in
Sweden
Sammanfattning
Background
Parental stress can negatively affect the parent-child relationship and reduce the well-being of the
whole family. Family disagreement is associated with parental divorce and with psychological
problems in children.
Aims
The aim was to examine perceived parental stress and draw comparisons among mothers and
among fathers, in relation to educational level, parental experience, existence of a parental role
model and sense of coherence. The aim was also to examine perceived dyadic consensus and its
association with perceived parental stress within couples.
Methods
Questionnaires were completed by 320 mothers and 315 fathers at 1 week and 18 months post-
partum. The Swedish Parenthood Stress Questionnaire, the Sense of Coherence Scale and the
Dyadic Consensus Subscale were used.
Results
Low education, lack of a role model and poor sense of coherence promoted stress in mothers in the
subareas social isolation and spouse relationship problems, while lack of a role model and poor
sense of coherence promoted stress in fathers in the subarea social isolation. Furthermore, parental
experiences promoted stress among mothers in the subarea incompetence while this was not seen
among fathers. Mothers perceived a higher level of dyadic consensus than fathers in the items
recreational activities, friends, aims and life goals, time spent together, and decisions regarding
career and personal development. Household tasks was the only item where fathers perceived a
higher level of dyadic consensus than mothers. Additionally, there were associations between
perceived parental stress and dyadic consensus in several items and in the total score. Published by arrangement with John Wiley & Sons.
Conclusions
To promote parents' health and family stability, health professionals should consider factors
affecting stress and stress reactions, and take gender roles into account.