“…Although the complex interplay between parental well-being, interparental conflict, parenting, and children’s adjustment has been extensively examined in intact families (e.g., Fisher et al, 2015 ; Schudlich et al, 2019 ; Shelton & Harold, 2008 ), it remains understudied in divorced families. Recently, using cross-sectional data from a sample of 144 parent-adolescent dyads in Iran, with 69 from divorced families, Asanjarani et al ( 2021 ) found that parents’ depressive symptoms mediated the associations between interparental overt hostility and adolescents’ adjustment outcomes, including both behavioral problems and prosocial behaviors, specifically for divorced families. Despite the scarceness of available research, more efforts are needed to test the roles of parental well-being in the association between pre/postdivorce interparental conflict and child adaptation, given the well-documented adult health consequences of relationship dissolution (see Whisman et al, 2022 ; Sbarra & Coan, 2017 ), the critical implications of parental well-being for both parenting and child adaptation (see Galbally & Lewis, 2017 ; Goodman & Brand, 2008 ), as well as the impacts of parental distress on interparental conflict and child adjustment in the context of divorce (see Fear et al, 2009 ; Lucas et al, 2013 ; Martínez-Pampliega et al, 2021 ; Taylor & Andrews, 2009 ; Trinder et al, 2008 ).…”