What is it about?
In the context of pervasive digital media, this study examined the associations between parenting stress and preschool children’s problematic media use, with parental phubbing as a mediator. A two-wave design was employed. At Wave 1, both mothers and fathers reported their own parenting stress and phubbing, and at Wave 2, mothers reported children’s problematic media use. Structural equation modeling within the common fate framework showed that, at the individual level, maternal and paternal parenting stress were significantly positively associated with their own phubbing but were not significantly associated with children’s problematic media use. At the family level, parenting stress was significantly positively associated with both parental phubbing and children’s problematic media use. Moreover, parental phubbing played a mediating role in the association between parenting stress and children’s problematic media use.
Featured Image
Photo by Kevin Delvecchio on Unsplash
Why is it important?
These findings suggest that the associations between parenting stress and parental phubbing are primarily systemic, rather than stemming from individual parents, and that family-wide parenting stress and parental phubbing during parent–child interactions may represent important factors in relation to preschoolers’ problematic media use.
Read the Original
This page is a summary of: Parenting stress and children’s problematic media use: An analysis based on the common fate model., Journal of Family Psychology, July 2026, American Psychological Association (APA),
DOI: 10.1037/fam0001485.
You can read the full text:
Contributors
Be the first to contribute to this page







