Jenn-Yun Tein’s research while affiliated with Arizona State University and other places

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Publications (186)


Profile mean comparisons for outcome variables
Latent profiles of coping and subjective views in parentally bereaved children: Predicting depression symptoms, intrusive grief, and suicidality over time
  • Article
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April 2025

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18 Reads

Development and Psychopathology

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Jenn-Yun Tein

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Childhood bereavement is a public health issue with significant mental health implications, including depression, intrusive grief, and suicidality. Theories suggest that children’s malleable processes, like coping and subjective views of themselves and their environment, influence adaptation to bereavement. Protective processes may mitigate mental health risks, while risk processes may exacerbate them. Using a sample of support-seeking, parentally-bereaved children (8–16 years; M = 11.39, SD = 2.43; 53% male; 67% White), this study employs latent profile analysis to identify baseline patterns of coping and subjective views; and examines how profile membership predicts depression symptoms, intrusive grief, and suicidality at 14-month and six-year assessments. Three profiles were identified: Low Protective-High Risk (34%), High Protective-Low Risk (23%), and High Protective-High Risk (43%). Profile membership predicted depression symptoms. Children in the Low Protective-High Risk profile showed higher depression symptoms than those in the other profiles 14-months later, while children in the High Protective-Low Risk profile unexpectedly showed higher depression symptoms six-years later compared to those in the Low Protective-High Risk profile. Profile membership did not predict intrusive grief or suicidality. Findings underscore the importance of person-centered approaches in understanding adaptation following parental death and raise questions about the association between baseline childhood protective processes and long-term depression symptoms.

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Trajectories of children's intrusive grief and association with baseline family and child factors and long-term outcomes in young adulthood

December 2024

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18 Reads

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1 Citation

Development and Psychopathology

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Jenn-Yun Tein

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[...]

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Sharlene Wolchik

This study reports on the description of children’s distinct trajectories of intrusive grief, baseline predictors of grief trajectories, and the association of grief trajectories with mental health, substantive abuse and disordered grief six and fifteen years following baseline assessment. The study uses data on 244 parentally-bereaved children ages 8–16 at baseline. Four distinct trajectories were identified using Growth Mixture Modeling over four waves of assessment across 6 years. The trajectories were labeled high chronic grief, moderate chronic grief, grief recovery (starts high but decreases over 6 years of assessment) and grief resilience (chronic low grief). Baseline factors associated with chronic high or moderate chronic levels of grief included depression, traumatic cause of death (homicide or suicide), active inhibition of emotional expression, active coping, child age and gender. At the six-year assessment, trajectories were associated with internalizing mental health problems, higher level of traumatic grief, and aversive views of the self. At the fifteen-year assessment, trajectories were associated with intrusive grief. The results are interpreted in terms of consistency with prior evidence of children’s long-term grief, theoretical processes that may account for chronic grief and implications for the development of preventive and treatment interventions.


Figure 1. Cascade effects of adolescent mental health problems, substance use, and competencies on perception of health problems in emerging adulthood.
Figure 2. Cascade effects of adolescent mental health problems, substance use, and competencies on BMI in emerging adulthood.
Figure 3. Cascade effects of adolescent mental health problems, substance use, and competencies on smoking cigarettes in emerging adulthood.
Correlations and descriptive statistics of study variables
Cascade effects of a parenting-focused program for divorced families on three health-related outcomes in emerging adulthood

October 2024

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52 Reads

Development and Psychopathology

Using data from a 15-year longitudinal follow-up of a randomized controlled trial of a parenting-focused preventive intervention for divorced families ( N = 240) with children aged 9–12, the current study examined alternative cascading pathways through which the intervention led to improvements in offspring’s perceived health problems, BMI, and cigarette smoking in emerging adulthood. It was hypothesized that the program would lead to improvements in these health-related outcomes during emerging adulthood through progressive associations between program-induced changes in parenting and offspring outcomes, including mental health problems, substance use, and competencies. Intervention-induced improvements in positive parenting at posttest led to improvements in mental health problems in late childhood/early adolescence, which led to lower levels of mental health and substance use problems as well as higher levels of competencies in adolescence, which led to improvements in the health-related outcomes. Academic performance predicted all three health-related outcomes and other aspects of adolescent functioning showed different relations across outcomes. Results highlight the potential for intervention effects of preventive parenting interventions in childhood to cascade over time to affect health-related outcomes in emerging adulthood.



Estimated Regression Coefficients of the Five Mediation Models
Developmental Pathways of the Family Bereavement Program to Promote Growth 15 Years After Parental Death

January 2024

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25 Reads

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1 Citation

Although parental death increases the risks of negative developmental outcomes, some individuals report personal growth, an outcome that has received little attention. We tested a developmental cascade model of postloss growth in 244 parentally bereaved youth (ages 8–16 at baseline) from 156 families who participated in a randomized controlled trial of a family-based intervention, the Family Bereavement Program (FBP). Using five waves of data, the present study examined the prospective associations between the quality of parenting immediately following the FBP and postloss growth 6 and 15 years later, and whether these associations were mediated by changes in intra- and interpersonal factors (mediators) during the initial 11 months following the FBP. The mediators were selected based on the theoretical and empirical literature on postloss growth in youth. Results showed that improved quality of parenting immediately following the FBP was associated with increased support-seeking behaviors and higher perceived parental warmth at the 11-month follow-up, both of which were related to postloss growth at the 6-year follow-up and 15-year follow-up. No support was found for the other hypothesized mediators that were tested: internalizing problems, intrusive grief thoughts, and coping efficacy. To promote postloss growth for parentally bereaved youth, bereavement services should target parent–child relationships that help youth feel a sense of parental warmth and acceptance and encourage youth to seek parental support.


Measurement and Functional Equivalence of a Reduced Version of the UPPS Impulsivity Scale Among Hispanic, Non-Hispanic Black, and Non-Hispanic White Adolescents

September 2023

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55 Reads

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2 Citations

The current study aimed to assess the measurement equivalence and functional equivalence of the UPPS (Urgency, Premeditation, Perseverance, Sensation Seeking) Impulsivity Scale among three ethnoracial adolescent samples in the U.S. seventh-grade students who self-identified as Hispanic (n = 472), non-Hispanic Black (n = 89), or non-Hispanic White (n = 90), and completed an English-language version of the Child version of the UPPS, which was shortened and modified to include positive urgency items. Through a series of confirmatory factor analyses, the UPPS demonstrated configural, metric, and partial threshold invariance. Fisher’s r-to-z transformations were used to assess the functional equivalence of the UPPS against well-validated measures of self-regulation and mental health commonly associated with impulsivity. We found some group differences in the magnitude of associations. Yet, overall, this study provides evidence that the UPPS can be used to measure distinct factors of impulsivity among Hispanic, non-Hispanic Black, and non-Hispanic White adolescents.


Preventing Adverse Outcomes for Bereaved Youth: Indirect Effects From a Randomized Trial of the Family Bereavement Program on Fear of Abandonment, Grief, and Mental Health

August 2023

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44 Reads

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1 Citation

Journal of Pediatric Psychology

Objectives: We investigated whether the self-system belief of fear of abandonment mediated the effects of intervention-induced change in 2 protective factors-positive parenting and adaptive coping-and one risk factor-stressful events-on youth mental health problems and maladaptive grief. This study extends prior research on fear of abandonment in youth who experience parental death by examining pathways through which a program reduced fear of abandonment and, in turn, affected subsequent pathways to child mental health problems in the context of a randomized experiment. Methods: This is a secondary data analysis study. We used data from the 4-wave longitudinal 2-arm parallel randomized controlled trial of the Family Bereavement Program conducted between 1996 and 1999 in a large city in the Southwestern United States. The sample consisted of 244 offspring between 8 and 16 at the pretest. They were assessed again at posttest, 11-month follow-up, and 6-year follow-up. Offspring, caregivers, and teachers provided data. Results: Mediation analyses indicated that intervention-induced reductions in stressful events were prospectively associated with a lower fear of abandonment. For girls, fear of abandonment was related to self-reported maladaptive grief and teacher-reported internalizing problems 6 years later. Conclusions: This study extends prior research on the relation between intervention-induced changes in risk and protective factors and improvements in outcomes of bereaved youth. The findings support the reduction of stressful events as a key proximal target of prevention programs for bereaved children.


Father report of adolescent externalizing problems as a function of father report of harsh parenting by high and low levels of adolescent report of harsh parenting
Father report of adolescent internalizing problems as a function of father report of parent–adolescent conflict by high and low levels of adolescent report of parent–adolescent conflict
Are Discrepancies Between Father and Adolescent Perceptions of Harsh Parenting and Conflict Associated with Adolescent Mental Health Symptoms?

August 2023

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129 Reads

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3 Citations

Journal of Youth and Adolescence

Though differences in informant perceptions of family processes are associated with poorer health, few studies have examined discrepancies between father- and adolescent-report of family phenomena and their impact on adolescent mental health. This study examined how father and adolescent-reported parenting and the differences in their perceptions is related to adolescent mental health. Participants were 326 father–adolescent dyads (Fathers: Mage = 41.2; Adolescents: 7th grade students, Mage = 12.0, 48.5% female). Overall, analyses revealed significant main effects of father and/or adolescent report of father–adolescent conflict and harsh parenting on adolescent internalizing and externalizing symptoms. Analyses revealed two instances in which discrepancies between father- and adolescent-report of family phenomena was related to adolescent mental health. Given the mixed nature of the findings based on the outcome reporter, the current study discusses implications for discrepancy research and future directions to better understand discrepant perceptions as useful information on their own. The parent clinical trial is registered at ClinicalTrials.gov (Identifier: NCT03125291, Registration date: 4/13/2017).


Figure 1. The hypothesized model of how the FBP may increase G2 Warmth attitudes and decrease G2 Physical Punishment attitudes through direct, modeling, and cascading effects. Note. *Adolescent functioning refers includes improvements in academic competence, peer competence, anxious and avoidant romantic attachment, and externalizing problems.
Correlations and descriptive statistics of attitudes and demographic variables
Correlations and descriptive statistics of outcome and potential mediating variables
Effects of a preventive parenting intervention for bereaved families on the intergenerational transmission of parenting attitudes: Mediating processes

August 2023

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101 Reads

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5 Citations

Development and Psychopathology

This study evaluated whether the Family Bereavement Program (FBP), a prevention program for parentally bereaved families, improved parenting attitudes toward parental warmth and physical punishment in young adult offspring 15 years after participation and identified mediational cascade pathways. One hundred fifty-six parents and their 244 offspring participated. Data were collected at pretest (ages 8-16), posttest, and six- and 15-year follow-ups. Ethnicity of offspring was: 67% non-Hispanic Caucasian, 16% Hispanic, 7% African American, 3% Native American, 1% Asian or Pacific Islander, and 6% other; 54% were males. There was a direct effect of the FBP on attitudes toward physical punishment; offspring in the FBP had less favorable attitudes toward physical punishment. There were also indirect effects of the FBP on parenting attitudes. The results supported a cascade effects model in which intervention-induced improvements in parental warmth led to fewer externalizing problems in adolescence/emerging adulthood, which in turn led to less favorable attitudes toward physical punishment. In addition, intervention-induced improvements in parental warmth led to improvements in anxious romantic attachment in mid-to-late adolescence/emerging adulthood, which led to more favorable attitudes toward parental warmth in emerging/young adulthood. These findings suggest that the effects of relatively brief prevention programs may persist into subsequent generations.


The Role of Early Intervention for Adolescent Mental Health and Polydrug Use: Cascading Mediation Through Childhood Growth in the General Psychopathology (p) Factor

May 2023

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42 Reads

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3 Citations

This study is a secondary data analysis that extends knowledge about the effects of the early childhood Family Check-Up (FCU) intervention to trajectories of general psychopathology problems (p factor) across early and middle childhood, and effects on adolescent psychopathology and polydrug use. The Early Steps Multisite study (ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier NCT00538252) is a randomized controlled trial of the FCU and consists of a large, racially and ethnically diverse sample of children who grew up in low-income households in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania; Eugene, Oregon; and Charlottesville, Virginia (n = 731; 49% female; 27.6% African American, 46.7% European American, 13.3% Hispanic/Latinx). To represent a comorbid presentation of internalizing and externalizing problems, we fit a bifactor model that included a general psychopathology (p) factor at eight ages in early childhood (ages 2–4), middle childhood (ages 7.5–10.5), and adolescence (age 14). Latent growth curve modeling was conducted to examine trajectories of the p factor across ages within the developmental periods of early and middle childhood. The effects of FCU on the reductions in growth in the childhood p factor had cascading effects on adolescent p factor (i.e., within-domain effect) and polydrug use (i.e., across-domain effect). Findings underscore the utility of the early FCU in preventing a host of maladaptive adolescent outcomes across diverse settings and populations.


Citations (78)


... The development of personality traits in adolescence is significantly shaped by environmental and familial contexts [1]. Research has consistently shown that high-conflict family settings, socio-economic challenges, and inadequate parental supervision can influence the emergence of maladaptive traits [20], [21], [6]. Adolescents in such contexts often experience self-doubt and a heightened desire for validation, leading to a craving for social recognition and self-gratification [22]. ...

Reference:

Validation Syndrome: The Root of Deception and Developmental Predictors of Dark Triad Traits in Adolescents for Forensic and Developmental Psychology
Predictors of Stability/Change in Observed Parenting Patterns Across Early Childhood: A Latent Transition Approach
  • Citing Article
  • September 2024

Early Childhood Research Quarterly

... Childhood bereavement is a critical public health issue, with one in 12 children in the United States experiencing the death of a parent before age 18 (Judi's House, 2024). Parental death is one of the most profound adverse childhood experiences (Yamamoto et al., 1996) and a leading form of trauma associated with markedly higher risk of developing and sustaining mental health problems (Ajnakina et al., 2018;Berg et al., 2016;Burrell et al., 2021) including depression (McKay et al., 2021;Simbi et al., 2020), intrusive grief (Kaplow et al., 2012;Melhem et al., 2007Melhem et al., , 2011Sandler et al., 2024;Shear et al., 2007), and suicidality (Hua et al., 2019;Kwak & Ahn, 2020). ...

Trajectories of children's intrusive grief and association with baseline family and child factors and long-term outcomes in young adulthood
  • Citing Article
  • December 2024

Development and Psychopathology

... We used Mplus 8 (Muthén & Muthén, 1998-2017 to conduct LCA/LTA and examine the association of transition patterns and early adult internalizing and externalizing problems. We applied two modern approaches to handle missing data. ...

Methodology and Statistical Approaches for Conducting Valid and Reliable Longitudinal Prevention Science Research
  • Citing Chapter
  • December 2016

... For the remaining 16 parenting strategies, 13 were reported more often by the parent and 3 more often by the youth. This finding is consistent with other studies that found discrepancies when asking parents and youth to report on parenting behaviours (Hidalgo et al., 2023;Nichols & Tanner-Smith, 2022). However, it may not be the discrepancy in reporting specific strategies that is most important for understanding youth outcomes such as resilience. ...

Are Discrepancies Between Father and Adolescent Perceptions of Harsh Parenting and Conflict Associated with Adolescent Mental Health Symptoms?

Journal of Youth and Adolescence

... Schools need to think of ways to reduce barriers to parental participation. Research by Rhodes et al. (2023) and (Lamadang et al. 2024) mentioned that barriers such as lack of time, low levels of parental education or communication gaps between school and home often reduce the effectiveness of parental engagement. Therefore, providing more flexible and accessible parenting materials, such as through digital platforms or short trainings, can help overcome these barriers. ...

Effects of a preventive parenting intervention for bereaved families on the intergenerational transmission of parenting attitudes: Mediating processes

Development and Psychopathology

... Furthermore, because of the use of a genetically sensitive research design, the study's findings offer unique validation of the salience of incorporating parental influences in the assessment of youth comorbid problem behavior, as most prior research in this area has not been able to partition environmental from passive genetic influences (Gilliom & Shaw, 2004;Hentges et al., 2020). Second, consistent with our findings about general versus specific transmission, recent work on understanding the mechanisms underlying improvements in adolescent mental health and substance use from family-based interventions like the Family Check-Up suggest that the vast majority of variance in such changes is accounted for by a shared general "p" factor (Tein et al., 2023). These findings are consistent with the current study's in suggesting the importance of focusing on the severity of youth symptoms across externalizing and internalizing domains, rather than continuity within specific problem behavior types. ...

The Role of Early Intervention for Adolescent Mental Health and Polydrug Use: Cascading Mediation Through Childhood Growth in the General Psychopathology (p) Factor

... Bereaved children are more likely to be diagnosed with and hospitalized for depression compared to their non-bereaved peers, with this increased risk extending through childhood, adolescence, and adulthood Keyes et al., 2014;Melhem et al., 2007;Pham et al., 2018). Children's grief is linked with functional impairment (Melhem et al., , 2011(Melhem et al., , 2013 and poorer mental health including internalizing problems , depression (Melhem et al., 2011(Melhem et al., , 2013Sandler et al., 2023), and suicidality (Hill et al., 2019;Melhem et al., 2007;Sandler et al., 2021). Although grief generally decreases over time, that is not the case for all children. ...

Developmental Pathways of the Family Bereavement Program to Prevent Major Depression 15 Years Later
  • Citing Article
  • March 2023

Journal of the American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry

... They have many characteristics that render individuals or groups unique and distinct. This concept recognizes that people differ in various ways, including racial, ethnic, cultural, and national backgrounds (Causadias et al., 2023;Chauhan & Kshetri, 2022). Equity, by contrast, refers to the fair and just treatment of all individuals with a deliberate focus on addressing their specific needs, circumstances, and abilities. ...

Innovative Theory and Methods for the Next Generation of Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Sciences: Introduction to the Special Issue

... Firstly, this study used self-reported questionnaires for data collection and therefore recall bias may be present, although previous studies have shown that these scales have good reliability and validity [25,27,42,43]. Secondly, social phobia, insomnia, and negative emotions in this study were collected at follow-up, and a causal relationship between the three could not be determined during the same time period, but some cohort studies have shown that both social phobia and insomnia are predictive of negative emotions [44][45][46] and that social phobia is also predictive of insomnia [20]. Further, the sample of the study was confined to three institutions in a particular region, so the representativeness of the sample was limited and extrapolation of the study's findings needs to be done with caution. ...

Life stress, insomnia, and anxiety/depressive symptoms in adolescents: A three-wave longitudinal study
  • Citing Article
  • November 2022

Journal of Affective Disorders

... Targeting children's adaptive coping is a promising approach to mitigating risk for mental health problems. Prior evidence shows that adaptive coping is a malleable protective factor for children who face a wide range of divorce-related stressors (Grych, 2005;Sandler et al., 1994;Stathakos & Roehrle, 2003;Wolchik et al., 2015). One study found that certain coping strategies, such as problem-focused coping, may be especially protective for children experiencing high levels of post-separation/divorce IPC (O'Hara et al., 2019). ...

Moderators and Mediators of Treatments for Youth in Divorced or Separated Families
  • Citing Chapter
  • August 2015