Although the beneficial psychological effects of self-compassion are well documented, less is known about its contributing factors. Attachment theory and social mentality theory posit that parenting might contribute to adolescent self-compassion. Nevertheless, no previous meta-analysis has systematically investigated this association. Furthermore, self-compassion might be a mediator in explaining the well-established link between parenting and adolescent internalizing problems, although previous meta-analyses have rarely systematically explored this nor investigated how these processes unfold differently for adolescents with different characteristics and from different cultures. This meta-analysis included 110 articles comprising 120 independent samples with 88,349 adolescents. The results of three-level meta-analyses revealed that positive and negative parenting were associated with higher and lower adolescent self-compassion, respectively, with small to moderate effect sizes. Additionally, meta-analytic structural equation modeling result showed that self-compassion mediated the relationships between both positive and negative parenting and internalizing problems. These associations in the mediation model were largely equivalent across adolescent age, gender and different cultures except for a stronger effect of self-compassion on internalizing problems in samples with higher proportions of female adolescents and from more individualistic cultures. The findings imply that parenting and adolescent self-compassion might be crucial targets for mitigating adolescent internalizing problems.
Congratulations to Prof. LOU W.Q. Vivian on being recognized among the Healthy Ageing 50 Leaders by the UN Decade of Healthy Ageing (2021?2030). The Healthy Ageing 50 highlights people from every region and sector?government, civil society, academia, and business?whose work is measurably improving the lives, rights, and well-being of older people and advancing the Decade?s priorities: combating ageism, fostering age-friendly environments, and expanding access to integrated and long-term care. Honourees are profiled on the Decade platform to showcase approaches with proven impact and potential to scale, and to catalyse collaboration across countries and disciplines?reflecting Dr. LOU?s leadership in ageing and longevity.
Learn more: https://www.decadeofhealthyageing.org/topics-initiatives/other-initiatives/healthy-ageing-50#anchor_two
Prof. LAW Y.W. Frances was admitted as a Fellow of the Academy by the Hong Kong Academy of Social Work. The Fellowship is a senior professional honour that recognizes social work leaders with sustained, exemplary contributions to the profession and the community. Fellows are peer?acknowledged for their professional excellence and leadership, ethical standing, impact on practice and policy, scholarship and education, and dedicated service. As a Fellow, Prof. Law is part of a community expected to set standards for the field, champion continuing professional development, mentor the next generation, and help advance the Academy?s mission to strengthen social work quality and public trust in Hong Kong. This recognition affirms her leadership and broad impact across research, practice, and community engagement.
Learn more: https://academy.hkswa.org.hk/zh-HK/membership/information/fellow/