Pakenham Kenneth I, Bursnall Samantha
Behaviour Research and Therapy Centre, School of Psychology, The University of Queensland, Qld 4072, Australia.
Clin Rehabil. 2006 Aug;20(8):709-23. doi: 10.1191/0269215506cre976oa.
To examine adjustment in children of a parent with multiple sclerosis within a stress and coping framework and compare them with those who have 'healthy' parents.
A total of 193 participants between 10 and 25 years completed questionnaires; 48 youngsters who had a parent with multiple sclerosis and 145 youngsters who reported that they did not have a parent with an illness or disability.
A questionnaire survey methodology was used. Variable sets included caregiving context (e.g. additional parental illness, family responsibilities, parental functional impairment, choice in helping), social support (network size, satisfaction), stress appraisal, coping (problem solving, seeking support, acceptance, wishful thinking, denial), and positive (life satisfaction, positive affect, benefits) and negative (distress, health) adjustment outcomes.
Caregiving context variables significantly correlated with poorer adjustment in children of a parent with multiple sclerosis included additional parental illness, higher family responsibilities, parental functional impairment and unpredictability of the parent's multiple sclerosis, and less choice in helping. As predicted, better adjustment in children of a parent with multiple sclerosis was related to higher levels of social support, lower stress appraisals, greater reliance on approach coping strategies (problem solving, seeking support and acceptance) and less reliance on avoidant coping (wishful thinking and denial). Compared with children of 'healthy' parents, children of a parent with multiple sclerosis reported greater family responsibilities, less reliance on problem solving and seeking social support coping, higher somatization and lower life satisfaction and positive affect.
Findings delineate the key impacts of young caregiving and support a stress and coping model of adjustment in children of a parent with multiple sclerosis.
在压力与应对框架内研究患有多发性硬化症的父母的子女的适应情况,并将他们与父母“健康”的子女进行比较。
共有193名年龄在10至25岁之间的参与者完成了问卷调查;其中48名青少年的父母患有多发性硬化症,145名青少年报告称他们没有患病或残疾的父母。
采用问卷调查方法。变量集包括照顾情境(如父母的其他疾病、家庭责任、父母功能障碍、帮助方式的选择)、社会支持(网络规模、满意度)、压力评估、应对方式(解决问题、寻求支持、接受、如意算盘、否认)以及积极(生活满意度、积极情绪、益处)和消极(痛苦、健康)的适应结果。
与患有多发性硬化症的父母的子女适应较差显著相关的照顾情境变量包括父母的其他疾病、更高的家庭责任、父母功能障碍以及父母多发性硬化症的不可预测性,以及在帮助方式上选择较少。正如预期的那样,患有多发性硬化症的父母的子女更好的适应与更高水平的社会支持、更低的压力评估、更多地依赖积极应对策略(解决问题、寻求支持和接受)以及更少地依赖回避应对(如意算盘和否认)有关。与“健康”父母的子女相比,患有多发性硬化症的父母的子女报告称家庭责任更大,较少依赖解决问题和寻求社会支持的应对方式,躯体化程度更高,生活满意度和积极情绪更低。
研究结果描绘了青少年照顾的关键影响,并支持了患有多发性硬化症的父母的子女适应的压力与应对模型。