Key Terms Chapter 3: Family Influences on Child Health Promotion
Consanguineous
Blood relationships.
Nuclear Family
Comprised of two parents and their children. Parent-child relationship may be biologic, step, adoptive, or foster. Siblings may be biologic, step, half, or adoptive. Parents are not necessarily married.
Traditional Nuclear Family
Consists of a married couple and their biological children. Siblings, if present, will be full blooded; no halves, steps, adoptive, etc.
Family Structure or Family Composition
Consists of individuals, each with a socially recognized status and position, who interact with one another on a regular, recurring basis in socially sanctioned ways.
Communal Family
Emerged from disenchantment with most contemporary life choices. Although communal families have divergent beliefs, practices, and organization, the basic impetus for formation is often dissatisfaction with the nuclear family structure, social systems, and goals of the larger community.
Resiliency Model of Family Stress, Adjustment and Adaption
Emphasizes that the stressful situation is not necessarily pathologic or detrimental to the family but demonstrates that the family needs to make fundamental structural or systemic changes to adapt to the situation.
Stressors
Events that cause stress and have the potential to effect a change in the family social system. Stressors can be either predictable or unpredictable.
Family Stress Theory
Explains how families react to stressful events and suggests factors that promote adaptation to stress.
Family of Origin
Family unit a person is born into.
Family
Has been defined in many different ways according to the individual's own frame of reference, values, or discipline. There is no universal definition of family; a family is what an individual considers it to be.
Single-Parent Family
In the US an estimated 21.7 million children live in this type of household. The contemporary single-parent family has emerged partially as a consequence of the women's rights movement and also as a result of more women (and men) establishing separate households because of divorce, death, desertion, or single parenthood.
Extended Family or Household
Includes at least one parent, one or more children and one or more members (related or unrelated) other than a parent or sibling.
Blended Family or Household aka Reconstituted
Includes at least one stepparent, step-sibling, or half-sibling. A stepparent is the spouse of a child's biologic parent but is not the child's biologic parent.
Household
Is a descriptive term frequently used, instead of family, because there is a considerable amount newer concepts of "family" such as communal families, single-parent families, and homosexual families.
Developmental Theory
Is an outgrowth of several theories of development * Duvall describes 8 developmental tasks of the family throughout its lifespan*
Family Systems Theory
Is derived from general systems theory, a science of "wholeness" that is characterized by interaction among the components of a system and between the system and the environment.
Same-sex, Homosexual, or Gay/Lesbian/Bisexual/Transgenger (GLBT) Family
Is one in which there is a legal or common-law tie between two persons of the same sex who have children.
Affinal
Marital relationships.
Discipline
Means to teach or refers to a set of rules governing conduct. In a narrower sense, it refers to the action taken to enforce the rules after noncompliance.
Identical or Monozygotic (MZ) Twins
Occurs when one ovum is fertilized and separates early in development.
Generational Continuity
Occurs when parents raise their own children in much the same way that they themselves were raised.
Adaptability
Occurs when the family members have the ability to distinguish themselves from each other both emotionally and intellectually. *According to Bowen's family systems theory adaptability is the key to healthy family function*
Fraternal or Dizygotic (DZ) Twins
Occurs when two ovum are fertilized.
Authoritative or Democratic Parenting Style
Parents combine practices from both Authoritarian and Permissive parenting styles. They direct their children's behavior and attitudes by emphasizing the reason for rules and negatively reinforcing deviations. Parental control is firm and consistent but tempered with encouragement, understanding, and security. Control is focused on the issue, not on withdrawal of love or fear of punishment.
Permissive Parenting Style
Parents exert little to no control over their children's actions. They avoid imposing their own standards of conduct and allow their children to regulate their own activity as much as possible. These parents consider themselves to be resources for their children, not role models.
Authoritarian or Dictatorial Parenting Style
Parents try to control their children's behavior and attitudes through unquestioned mandates. They establish rules and regulations or standards of conduct that they expect to be followed rigidly and unquestioningly. The message is: "Do it because I say so."
Limit Setting
Refers to establishing the rules or guidance for behavior.
Polyandry
Refers to multiple husbands.
Polygamy Sororal Nonsororal
Refers to multiple wives. Polygamy in which the wives are sisters. Polygamy in which the wives are not related.
Binuclear Family
Refers to parents continuing the parenting role while terminating the spousal unit.
Feedback
Refers to processes in the family that help identify strengths and needs and determine how well goals are accomplished. Positive feedback initiates change; negative feedback resists change.
Family Function
Refers to the interactions of family members, especially the quality of those relationships and interactions.
Joint Custody
The court assigns divorcing parents equal rights and responsibilities concerning the minor child or children.
Family Theory
Used to describe families and how the family unit responds to events both within and outside the family.