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Dive into the research topics where Bharathi J. Zvara is active.

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Featured researches published by Bharathi J. Zvara.


Developmental Psychology | 2015

Parenting and children's representations of family predict disruptive and callous-unemotional behaviors:

Nicholas J. Wagner; W. Roger Mills-Koonce; Michael T. Willoughby; Bharathi J. Zvara; Martha J. Cox

Data from a large prospective longitudinal study (n = 1,239) was used to investigate the association between observed sensitive parenting in early childhood and childrens representations of family relationships as measured by the Family Drawing Paradigm (FDP) in first grade as well as the extent to which these representations partially mediate the influences of early caregiving experiences on later conduct problems and callous-unemotional behaviors. A structural equation modeling approach revealed that less sensitive parenting at 24, 36, and 58 months predicts higher levels of conduct problems (CP) and callous-unemotional (CU) behaviors in first grade controlling for earlier measures of CP and CU behaviors. Results also indicated that greater dysfunctional family representations, as assessed with the FDP, are significantly associated with higher CU behaviors in the first grade, but not CP. Finally, a test of the indirect pathway suggests that childrens dysfunctional family representations may, in part, account for the association between sensitive parenting and CU behaviors.


Attachment & Human Development | 2014

The mediating role of parenting in the associations between household chaos and children’s representations of family dysfunction

Bharathi J. Zvara; William Roger Mills-Koonce; Patricia Garrett-Peters; Nicholas J. Wagner; Lynne Vernon-Feagans; Martha J. Cox

Children’s drawings are thought to reflect their mental representations of self and their interpersonal relations within families. Household chaos is believed to disrupt key proximal processes related to optimal development. The present study examines the mediating role of parenting behaviors in the relations between two measures of household chaos, instability and disorganization, and how they may be evidenced in children’s representations of family dysfunction as derived from their drawings. The sample (N = 962) is from a longitudinal study of rural poverty exploring the ways in which child, family, and contextual factors shape development over time. Findings reveal that, after controlling for numerous factors including child and primary caregiver covariates, there were significant indirect effects from cumulative family disorganization, but not cumulative family instability, on children’s representation of family dysfunction through parenting behaviors. Results suggest that the proximal effects of daily disorganization outweigh the effects of periodic instability overtime.


Addictive Behaviors | 2018

Association of childhood abuse and prescription opioid use in early adulthood

Anna E. Austin; Meghan E. Shanahan; Bharathi J. Zvara

INTRODUCTION Previous research has examined the association of childhood abuse with opioid misuse and dependence in adulthood. However, little research has focused specifically on prescription opioids, and no studies have examined associations with prescription opioid use, a potential pathway to later opioid misuse and dependence. The aim of the present study was to examine the association of childhood emotional, physical, and sexual abuse with prescription opioid use in early adulthood. METHODS We used data from Waves I (12-18years) and IV (24-32years) of the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health. At Wave IV, respondents reported experiences of childhood abuse occurring prior to age 18years and prescription opioid use in the last four weeks. We conducted multivariable logistic regression to examine associations of childhood abuse with recent prescription opioid use. RESULTS In multivariable models adjusted for respondent sex, race/ethnicity, age, and socioeconomic status, childhood emotional abuse (OR=1.57, 95% CI 1.29, 1.90), physical abuse (OR=1.46, 95% CI 1.14, 1.87), and any childhood abuse (OR=1.51, 95% CI 1.24, 1.82) were significantly associated with recent prescription opioid use. CONCLUSIONS Given continued increases in prescription opioid use and opioid-related morbidity and mortality in the U.S., understanding upstream social and environmental factors associated with prescription opioid use is important to strengthening and expanding current prevention and intervention strategies. Future research is needed to examine factors potentially mediating the association between childhood abuse and prescription opioid use in order to provide additional insights for prevention and intervention efforts.


Journal of Womens Health | 2018

Positive Emotions During Infant Feeding and Postpartum Mental Health

Kathryn Wouk; Nisha C. Gottfredson; Christine Tucker; Brian W. Pence; Samantha Meltzer-Brody; Bharathi J. Zvara; Karen M. Grewen; Alison M. Stuebe

BACKGROUND Research shows that individuals can improve mental health by increasing experiences of positive emotions. However, the role of positive emotions in perinatal mental health has not been investigated. This study explored the extent to which positive emotions during infant feeding are associated with maternal depression and anxiety during the first year postpartum. MATERIALS AND METHODS One hundred and sixty-four women drawn from a longitudinal cohort of mother-infant dyads were followed from the third trimester through 12 months postpartum. We measured positive emotions during infant feeding at 2 months using the mean subscale score of the modified Differential Emotions Scale. Depression and anxiety symptoms were assessed with the Beck Depression Inventory-II and State Trait Anxiety Inventory-State subscale at months 2, 6, and 12. Generalized linear mixed models were used to estimate crude and multivariable associations. RESULTS Among women with no clinical depression during pregnancy, higher positive emotions during infant feeding at 2 months were associated with significantly fewer depression symptoms at 2, 6, and 12 months and with lower odds of clinically significant depression symptoms at 2 and 6 months. In contrast to depression outcomes, women with clinical anxiety during pregnancy who experienced higher positive emotions had significantly fewer anxiety symptoms at 2, 6, and 12 months and lower odds of clinically significant anxiety at 2 and 6 months. CONCLUSIONS Positive emotions during infant feeding are associated with depression and anxiety outcomes during the first year postpartum and may be a modifiable protective factor for maternal mental health.


Journal of Family Psychology | 2018

Bidirectional effects between parenting sensitivity and child behavior: A cross-lagged analysis across middle childhood and adolescence.

Bharathi J. Zvara; Kelly W. Sheppard; Martha J. Cox

Using a longitudinal, cross-lagged design, this study examined the bidirectional relations between mothers’ and fathers’ sensitivity and children’s externalizing (EXT) and internalizing (INT) behavior from middle childhood into adolescence. The subsample comprised families (N = 578) in which the mother and father cohabitated from the study’s first time point (child age = 54 months) through Age 15 in the longitudinal NICHD Study of Early Child Care and Youth Development. Study results revealed differential patterns for mother–child and father–child relations in the full sample and separately for males and females. The full cross-lagged models revealed that child EXT behavior predicted maternal sensitivity, but not vice versa, and fathers’ sensitivity and child behavior were reciprocally interrelated. There was a significant indirect pathway from early paternal sensitivity to later EXT in males, and from early maternal sensitivity to INT in females. The results point to the important roles that fathers play in child INT and EXT behaviors and important differences between males and females.


Developmental Psychology | 2018

Mother–child role confusion, child adjustment problems, and the moderating roles of child temperament and sex.

Bharathi J. Zvara; Jenny Macfie; Martha J. Cox; Roger Mills-Koonce

Role confusion is a deviation in the parent–child relationship such that a parent looks to a child to meet the parent’s emotional needs and abdicates, in part, the parental role in exchange for care, intimacy, or peer support from the child. In addition, a child may initiate role-confused behavior in order to gain closeness to a parent who is otherwise preoccupied by his or her own needs. The current study examined associations between mother–child role confusion at age 5 (we coded role confusion from filmed free-play mother–child interactions) and teacher reports of internalizing and externalizing symptoms, and peer problems, at Grade 1. The sample (N = 557) is from a longitudinal study of families in rural communities, the Family Life Project. Mother–child role confusion predicted internalizing symptoms and peer problems (but not externalizing symptoms) above and beyond other dimensions of maternal parenting (sensitivity and harsh intrusiveness), demographic factors, and prior levels of outcome variables. However, some effect sizes were small, making replication desirable. Temperament and child sex were important moderators: girls with difficult temperaments and boys with easy temperaments were more vulnerable to internalizing symptoms (but not externalizing symptoms or peer problems) in the context of role confusion. We discuss the singular importance of role confusion, a construct that has been largely unrecognized by developmental psychologists until recently, for behavioral outcomes of children as they transition into middle childhood.


Journal of Family Violence | 2017

Maternal Childhood Sexual Trauma, Child Directed Aggression, Parenting Behavior, and the Moderating Role of Child Sex

Bharathi J. Zvara; Roger Mills-Koonce; Martha J. Cox

Using propensity-matched controls, the present study examines the associations between maternal report of child-directed aggression and observed parenting behavior across early childhood for women with and without childhood sexual trauma histories. The moderating role of child sex was also examined. The sample (N = 204) is from a longitudinal study of rural poverty exploring the ways in which child, family, and contextual factors shape development over time. After controlling for numerous factors including child and primary caregiver covariates, findings reveal that childhood sexual trauma is related to sensitive parenting behavior and child-directed aggression. Findings further revealed that child sex moderates the relation between sexual trauma history and maternal behavior towards children. Implications for interventions for mothers with childhood sexual trauma histories and directions for future study are proposed.


Family Relations | 2016

Intimate Partner Violence, Maternal Gatekeeping, and Child Conduct Problems

Bharathi J. Zvara; W. Roger Mills-Koonce; Martha J. Cox

We examined the mediating role of parenting behavior on the relationship between intimate partner violence and child conduct problems, as well as the moderating role of maternal gatekeeping to these associations. The sample (N = 395) is from a longitudinal study of rural poverty in the eastern United States, exploring the ways in which child, family, and contextual factors shape child development over time. Study findings indicate that a fathers harsh-intrusive parenting behavior may be a key mediating pathway linking intimate partner violence and child conduct problems. Study findings further provide evidence for problematic outcomes for children when mothers encourage fathers with high levels of harsh-intrusive parenting to interact with their children.


Family Relations | 2013

Fathers' Involvement in Child Health Care: Associations with Prenatal Involvement, Parents' Beliefs, and Maternal Gatekeeping

Bharathi J. Zvara; Sarah J. Schoppe-Sullivan; Claire M. Kamp Dush


Journal of Applied Developmental Psychology | 2015

Mothers' and fathers' sensitivity and children's cognitive development in low-income, rural families

W. Roger Mills-Koonce; Michael T. Willoughby; Bharathi J. Zvara; Melissa A. Barnett; Hanna Gustafsson; Martha J. Cox

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W. Roger Mills-Koonce

University of North Carolina at Greensboro

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William Roger Mills-Koonce

University of North Carolina at Greensboro

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Roger Mills-Koonce

University of North Carolina at Greensboro

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Alison M. Stuebe

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Amanda Clincy

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Anna E. Austin

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Brian W. Pence

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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