Szczygieł, DorotaSWPS University of Humanities and Social Sciences
Co-first author
Abstract
Recent evidence has shown that Western parents are five times more vulnerable to developing parental burnout than parents in other parts of the world. It has also been found that this augmented susceptibility is explained by the group tendency of individualism cultural value that prevails in Western societies. Still, whether this relation observed at the group mean level across countries can be generalised to the association of personal value with parental burnout across individuals has not yet been explored. In order to address this question, the current study collected a sample of 643 Polish parents and assessed their report of value priorities and parental burnout. The results demonstrated that individual-level values indeed predict susceptibility to parental burnout. Specifically, parents are more susceptible to parental burnout when prioritising values that emphasise power and achievement, whereas prioritising benevolence protects parents from parental burnout. Associations between parents' gender, personal values, and parental burnout were also examined. Consistent with previous studies, fathers reported fewer parental burnout symptoms compared to mothers. However, gender differences in parental burnout were not mediated by personal values, nor did parents' gender moderate the effect of personal values on burnout. In sum, together with previous results obtained at the society level, our finding points out the role of values in predicting parental burnout. A possible future direction of research was discussed: examining the affective mechanism (e.g., parental regulation of emotions) underlying the relationship between personal values and parental burnout.
Lin, G.-X., & Szczygieł, D. (2022). Basic Personal Values and Parental Burnout: a Brief Report. Affective Science. Accepted/in-press. https://doi.org/10.1007/s42761-022-00103-y (Original work published 2022)