“…Coparenting between mothers and fathers in the form of either supportive or conflictual relations also predicts externalizing and disruptive behaviors in young children (Belsky, Woodworth, & Crnic, 1996; Schoppe-Sullivan et al, 2009). We have also found that home observations of coparenting (low support and undermining) between parents during triadic interaction with the firstborn before the birth predicted increases in externalizing behaviors 1 month after the birth, and that supportive and undermining coparenting interacted so that the greatest increases in externalizing behavior problems occurred when mothers and fathers were high on undermining coparenting and low on supportive coparenting (Kolak & Volling, 2013). Parenting stress (Shaw et al, 2001) and the social support parents receive from family and friends may play a role in the emergence of disruptive behaviors, most likely due to the fact that reliance on others for emotional, financial, and instrumental support can alleviate much of the caregiving stress, reduce role overload and enhance parental mental health (Lee, Anderson, Horowitz, & August, 2009; Guralnick, Hammond, Neville, & Connor, 2008; Hoagwood et al, 2010; DeGarmo, Patras, & Eap, 2008; Leahy-Warren, McCarthy, & Corcoran, 2012).…”