Search Articles

View query in Help articles search

Search Results (1 to 5 of 5 Results)

Download search results: CSV END BibTex RIS


Parenting-Related Social Networking Site Use and Psychological Distress in Parents of Infants: Cross-sectional Study Exploring the Moderating Effects of Loneliness and Parenting Anxiety

Parenting-Related Social Networking Site Use and Psychological Distress in Parents of Infants: Cross-sectional Study Exploring the Moderating Effects of Loneliness and Parenting Anxiety

Descriptive statistics and gender differences (N=429). a Missing values: n=35 (mother: n=13; father: n=22). b Not applicable. c Missing values: n=2 (mother: n=1; father: n=1). d Missing values: n=4 (mother: n=2; father: n=2). e Missing values: n=5 (mother: n=1; father: n=2). f Missing values: n=3 (mother: n=1; father: n=2). g Missing value: n=1 (mother: n=1). Table 3 presents the descriptive statistics and differences in SNS use between fathers and mothers.

Ryuta Onishi

JMIR Pediatr Parent 2024;7:e59029

Digital Parenting Interventions for Fathers of Infants From Conception to the Age of 12 Months: Systematic Review of Mixed Methods Studies

Digital Parenting Interventions for Fathers of Infants From Conception to the Age of 12 Months: Systematic Review of Mixed Methods Studies

Father involvement during the perinatal period (ie, from conception to 1 year following birth) and fathers’ access to knowledge about the transition to parenthood are important for perinatal mental health, improved adjustment to parenthood, and the provision of support from fathers to families [1].

Elisabeth Bailin Xie, James Wonkyu Jung, Jasleen Kaur, Karen M Benzies, Lianne Tomfohr-Madsen, Elizabeth Keys

J Med Internet Res 2023;25:e43219

Web-Based Conversations Regarding Fathers Before and During the COVID-19 Pandemic: Qualitative Content Analysis

Web-Based Conversations Regarding Fathers Before and During the COVID-19 Pandemic: Qualitative Content Analysis

Next, using Brandwatch’s query editor, the authors wrote queries by combining simple terms to form a Boolean expression [13] based on social media mentions and language relating to experiences of new fatherhood (eg, “becoming a father”). The variations were selected based on common English adverbs and adjectives that could be associated with a person using first-person reference to becoming a father.

Lindsay Bouchacourt, Mike Henson-García, Kristen Leah Sussman, Dorothy Mandell, Gary Wilcox, Michael Mackert

JMIR Pediatr Parent 2023;6:e40371