Exploring Sibling Relationship Quality among Latinx Siblings: A Systematic Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Sibling Relationship Quality
1.2. Latinx Families
1.3. Current Study
2. Methods
3. Results
3.1. Characteristics of Included Studies
3.2. Sibling Relationship Quality Measurement
3.3. Cultural Factors
3.4. Influence of Cultural Factors on Sibling Relationship Quality
3.5. Methodological Considerations
4. Discussion
4.1. Sibling Relationship Quality Measurement
4.2. Cultural Factors
4.3. Methodological Considerations
4.4. Intervention and Policy Implications
4.5. Strengths and Limitations
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Citation | Design & Sample Characteristics | Sibling Relationship Quality Measurement | Cultural Factors | Significant Cultural Factors Findings | Other Significant Findings |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Alfaro & Umaña-Taylor (2010) [43] | Longitudinal Families (n = 258) 77.1% Mexican-American (siblings) Index sibling age M = 17.26 y Two-parent household NR | Child report Quantitative Sibling relationship quality and the culture of openness and disclosure [44]; quality | Nativity Gender | Being born in the U.S. was negatively correlated with sibling relationship quality. Sibling’s academic support was positively associated with academic motivation for boys but not girls. Sibling relationship quality was positively related to girls’ academic motivation. Nativity negatively related to girls’ academic motivation. | Sibling relationship quality was positively associated with sibling academic support and academic motivation. |
Cruz et al. (2019) [41] | Longitudinal Families (n = 404) 100% Mexican-American (siblings) Index sibling age M = 14.26 y Two-parent household NR | Child report Quantitative Sibling Closeness Scale [45]; intimacy, negative | Mexican American Cultural Values Scale [46]; familism (composite score of family support, emotional closeness, family referent, and family obligations) Gender | Familism was related to higher sibling intimacy in sibling relationships. Familism was related to lower alcohol use. Familism moderated the effects of sibling intimacy on later alcohol use. Lower familism and increasing intimacy were associated with a higher probability of any use. Higher familism increasing intimacy reduced the probability of use but increased the degree of use for sisters and mixed pairs. | Age 14 sibling negativity was associated with alcohol use. Sibling negativity was related to reduced alcohol use probability for brothers and increased alcohol use in mixed sibling pairs. |
East & Shi (1997) [47] | Cross-sectional Families (n = 80) 68% Mexican-American (siblings) Youngest sibling age M = 13.90 y Oldest sibling age M = 17.5 y Two-parent household NR | Child report Quantitative Sibling Relationship Questionnaire [48]; conflict, rivalry, status/power, warmth | None | NA | School/career orientation was positively associated with sibling warmth. Problem behaviors were positively associated with rivalry/parent partiality and conflict. Sexual permissiveness and sexual status were positively associated with sibling rivalry. Negative sibling relationship qualities (rivalry, competition, and conflict) were more closely related to younger sisters engaging in problem, delinquent-like behavior and sexual behavior than positive relationships. |
East et al. (2007) [39] | Longitudinal Families (n = 127) 57% Mexican-American (mothers) Index sibling age M = 13.7 y Two-parent household NR | Child report Quantitative Sibling Relationship Questionnaire [48]; conflict, rivalry, warmth, companionship | None | NA | Compared with young women with no family history of teenage births, young women whose sister had had a teenage birth and those whose sister and mother both had had teenage births were significantly more likely to experience a teenage pregnancy. Having both a mother and a sister who had had teenage births was independently associated with an elevated risk of pregnancy, even after controlling for socioeconomic and mothers’ parenting characteristics. |
Gamble & Modry-Mandell (2008) [40] | Longitudinal Families (n = 55) 100% Mexican-American (mothers) Index sibling age M = 4.79 y Two-parent household 100% | Parent report Quantitative Parental Expectations and Perceptions of Childrens Sibling Relationship Quality Questionnaire [49]; warmth | Relational Family Values Q-sort [50]; familism Simpatía Scale [51]; simpatía Gender | Simpatia was positively correlated with sibling warmth. Sibling warmth was significantly positively correlated with simpatia, mother–child closeness, emotional adjustment, and peer adjustment. Familism has a direct effect on predicting externalizing behaviors, controlling for sibling warmth. Familism and mother–child closeness predicted children’s emotional adjustment. Interaction between familism and sibling warmth predicted children’s emotional adjustment and peer adjustment. No significant gender differences were found for familism, simpatía, or sibling warmth. | Sibling warmth was significantly negatively correlated with internalizing and externalizing behaviors. Sibling warmth had a direct effect on behavior problems. Sibling warmth predicted peer adjustment. |
Gamble & Yu (2014) [52] | Longitudinal Families (n = 65) 95% Mexican-American (mothers) Index sibling age M = 4.79 y Two-parent household 100% | Parent report Quantitative Parental Expectations and Perceptions of Childrens’ Sibling Relationship Quality Questionnaire [49]; conflict, competition, warmth, | Relational Family Values Q-sort [50]; familism Simpatía Scale [51]; simpatía | Mothers’ higher simpatia and familism scores were associated with higher levels of sibling warmth. | Families characterized by more positive emotions were more likely to have children in sibling relations characterized by high levels of warmth and low levels of conflict. |
Killoren et al. (2017) [24] | Longitudinal Families (n = 246) 100% Mexican-American (siblings) Youngest sibling age M = 12.77 y Oldest sibling age M = 15.7 y Two-parent household 100% | Child report Quantitative Network of Relationships Inventory [53]; negative quality Sibling Intimacy Scale [54]; intimacy Perceived sibling control [55]; control | Years living in the United States Mexican American Cultural Values Scale [46]; familism (support/closeness, family obligations, and family as referent) Gender | Siblings with a positive relationship profile reported higher familism than siblings in the affect-intense and negative profiles. Older sibling gender moderated the link between familism in middle adolescence and sibling intimacy in young adulthood. For positive and negative profiles, younger siblings reported significantly higher levels of risky behaviors than their older opposite-sex siblings. | T1 depressive symptoms were a significant positive covariate, and there was a significant profile X birth order interaction such that profile differences in depressive symptoms emerged for older, but not younger, siblings. Older siblings in the negative profile reported higher depressive symptoms than older siblings in the positive and affect-intense profiles. For the negative profile, younger siblings reported higher levels of sexual risk behaviors than older siblings at T2, but there were no significant differences between older and younger siblings’ sexual risk behaviors at T3. |
Killoren et al. (2021) [56] | Longitudinal Families (n = 246) 100% Mexican-American (siblings) Youngest sibling age M = 12.77 y Oldest sibling age M = 15.7 y Two-parent household 100% | Child report Quantitative Sibling Intimacy Scale [54]; intimacy | Mexican American Cultural Values Scale [46]; familism (support/closeness, family obligations, and family as referent) Gender | Under conditions of stronger familism values, sibling intimacy in early adolescence predicted more positive values in later adolescence, which, in turn, led to relatively lower levels of risky behaviors and lower sexual risk behaviors in young adulthood. Sibling intimacy in early adolescence predicted younger siblings’ adjustment problems in young adulthood via their positive values in later adolescence, but only for younger siblings with strong familism values. | NA |
Killoren et al. (2015)[57] | Longitudinal Families (n = 246) 100% Mexican-American (siblings) Youngest sibling age M = 12.55 y Oldest sibling age M = 15.49 y Two-parent household 100% | Child report Quantitative Sibling Intimacy Scale [54]; intimacy | Nativity status of all family members; Years living in the United States; Mexican American Cultural Values Scale [46]; familism (support/closeness, family obligations, and family as referent) Gender | Familism values were associated with increased sibling intimacy during young adulthood Older sibling gender also moderated the link between familism in middle adolescence and sibling intimacy in young adulthood. Gender constellation moderated the link between youth’s familism in middle adolescence and sibling intimacy during young adulthood such that the mixed-gender dyads were significantly different from the girl–girl dyads. | NA |
Killoren et al. (2008) [58] | Cross-sectional Families (n = 246) 100% Mexican-American (siblings) Youngest sibling age M = 12.8 y Oldest sibling age M = 15.7 y Two-parent household 100% | Child report Quantitative Network of Relationships Inventory [53]; conflict Sibling Intimacy Scale [54]; intimacy Resolving Conflict in Relationship Scale [59]; control, solution orientation, non-confrontation | Nativity; years living in the United States; ARSMA-II [60]; cultural orientations (individual’s orientation to Mexican and Anglo culture) Gender | Cultural orientations and familism values were positively linked to siblings’ solution orientation. Actor familism and partner Mexican orientation were positively related to using non-confrontational strategies between siblings, whereas partner Anglo orientation was negatively related to non-confrontation. For solution orientation, there were significant positive effects for actor Mexican orientation, actor Anglo orientation, and actor and partner familism. The controlling model revealed that actor Anglo cultural orientation was positively related to controlling strategies. Bicultural-oriented adolescents (i.e., adolescents who fell above the median on Anglo and Mexican orientations) significantly used solution orientation more than adolescents who were not bicultural. Sibling gender and the gender constellation of the sibling dyad were not significant correlates of resolution strategies. | NA |
Modry-Mandell et al. (2007) [42] | Longitudinal Families (n = 55) 95% Mexican-American (mothers) Index sibling age M = 4.79 y Two-parent household 96% | Parent report Quantitative Parental Expectations and Perceptions of Children’s Sibling Relationship Quality Questionnaire [49]; competition, agonism, warmth | None | NA | Sibling warmth negatively predicted children’s behavior problems and positively predicted children’s adaptation. |
Updegraff et al. (2005) [29] | Cross-sectional Families (n = 246) 100% Mexican-American (siblings) Youngest sibling age M = 12.8 y Oldest sibling age M = 15.7 y Two-parent household 100% | Child report Quantitative Network of Relationships Inventory [53]; negative quality Sibling Intimacy Scale [54]; intimacy | Nativity; Years living in the United States; Mexican American Cultural Values Scale [46]; familism (support/closeness, family obligations, and family as referent) Gender | Sibling pairs spent more time together when parents were born in Mexico and reported less conflict when fathers were born in Mexico, but the effects were small. Cultural background characteristics were not related to adolescents’ familistic values and practices. Familism was associated with siblings’ feelings of intimacy and closeness and showed some links with siblings’ dyadic time, especially for sisters. | NA |
n/M (SD) | %/Range | |
---|---|---|
Two-caregiver households | ||
100% | 2 | 33.33% |
Not reported | 4 | 67.67% |
Family income majority upper or middle class | ||
Yes | 0 | 0.00% |
No | 4 | 66.67% |
Not reported | 2 | 33.33% |
Age of sibling (years) | ||
Age of index sibling | 12.50 (5.37) | 4.79–17.26 |
Age of youngest sibling in dyad | 13.34 (0.80) | 12.77–13.9 |
Age of oldest sibling in dyad | 16.60 (1.27) | 15.7–17.5 |
Siblings other than full included | ||
Yes | 1 | 16.67% |
No (full only) | 1 | 16.67% |
Not reported | 4 | 66.67% |
n/M (SD) | %/Range | |
---|---|---|
Methodology used in measure | ||
Quantitative measure | 6 | 100% |
Sibling relationship quality reporter of quantitative measures | ||
Caregiver only | 1 | 16.67% |
Child only | 5 | 83.33% |
Both caregiver and child | 0 | 0.00% |
Number of children who reported sibling relationship quality (n = 5) | ||
1 sibling | 4 | 80.00% |
2 siblings | 1 | 20.00% |
Most commonly used quantitative measures 1 | ||
Sibling Intimacy Scale [54] | 5 | 41.67% |
Network of Relationships Inventory [53] | 3 | 25.00% |
Parental Expectations and Perceptions of Children’s Sibling Relationship Quality Questionnaire [49] | 3 | 25.00% |
Sibling Relationship Questionnaire [48] | 2 | 16.67% |
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Holmes, M.R.; O’Donnell, K.A.; Lovato, K.; Kramer, L.; Korsch-Williams, A.E.; Herceg, A.E.; Stephens, S.O. Exploring Sibling Relationship Quality among Latinx Siblings: A Systematic Review. Behav. Sci. 2024, 14, 624. https://doi.org/10.3390/bs14070624
Holmes MR, O’Donnell KA, Lovato K, Kramer L, Korsch-Williams AE, Herceg AE, Stephens SO. Exploring Sibling Relationship Quality among Latinx Siblings: A Systematic Review. Behavioral Sciences. 2024; 14(7):624. https://doi.org/10.3390/bs14070624
Chicago/Turabian StyleHolmes, Megan R., Kari A. O’Donnell, Kristina Lovato, Laurie Kramer, Amy E. Korsch-Williams, Allison E. Herceg, and Sylvia O. Stephens. 2024. "Exploring Sibling Relationship Quality among Latinx Siblings: A Systematic Review" Behavioral Sciences 14, no. 7: 624. https://doi.org/10.3390/bs14070624
APA StyleHolmes, M. R., O’Donnell, K. A., Lovato, K., Kramer, L., Korsch-Williams, A. E., Herceg, A. E., & Stephens, S. O. (2024). Exploring Sibling Relationship Quality among Latinx Siblings: A Systematic Review. Behavioral Sciences, 14(7), 624. https://doi.org/10.3390/bs14070624