Hilliard M E, Monaghan M, Cogen F R, Streisand R
Department of Psychology, Children's National Medical Center, Washington, DC 20010, USA.
Child Care Health Dev. 2011 Mar;37(2):224-32. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2214.2010.01162.x. Epub 2010 Nov 18.
Parents of young children with type 1 diabetes (T1D) are responsible for executing a complex daily management regimen and are at risk for elevated levels of stress. Normative misbehaviour during the preschool years can complicate T1D management, and interpretation of behavioural concerns may vary because of child health status and parent stress. Within a paediatric transactional model framework, child characteristics (e.g. behaviour problems, metabolic control) and parent functioning (e.g. parenting stress, anxiety) likely impact one another.
Parents of 2- to 6-year-old children with T1D completed self-report measures, including the Pediatric Inventory for Parents (PIP), State-Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI), Eyberg Child Behavior Inventory (ECBI), and 24-h Recall Interviews. Medical data were obtained by parent report and medical record review. It was hypothesized that greater parent stress and child blood glucose variability would be significantly associated with greater parent-reported child behaviour concerns.
Moderate levels of parent stress and child behaviour problems were endorsed; however, parents perceived children's misbehaviour as problematic, particularly with relation to tasks relevant to diabetes management (e.g. bedtimes and mealtimes). Structural equation modelling indicated that greater general anxiety and paediatric parenting stress was associated with parent report of more problematic child behaviour. Blood glucose variability did not significantly contribute to this relationship.
The stress experienced by parents of young children with chronic illness appears to relate to their perception of their children's behaviour problems. Parents' experiences with developmentally normative misbehaviour may interfere with disease management and exacerbate parents' stress and the subsequent impact on well-being. Implications for supporting parents and children with T1D are discussed.
1型糖尿病(T1D)幼儿的父母负责执行复杂的日常管理方案,并且有压力水平升高的风险。学龄前儿童的正常行为问题会使T1D管理复杂化,并且由于儿童健康状况和父母压力,对行为问题的解读可能会有所不同。在儿科交互模型框架内,儿童特征(如行为问题、代谢控制)和父母功能(如育儿压力、焦虑)可能会相互影响。
患有T1D的2至6岁儿童的父母完成了自我报告测量,包括父母用儿童行为量表(PIP)、状态-特质焦虑量表(STAI)、艾氏儿童行为量表(ECBI)和24小时回忆访谈。通过父母报告和病历审查获得医疗数据。研究假设是,更大的父母压力和儿童血糖变异性将与父母报告的更多儿童行为问题显著相关。
父母压力和儿童行为问题的水平为中等;然而,父母认为孩子的不当行为是个问题,特别是与糖尿病管理相关的任务(如就寝时间和用餐时间)。结构方程模型表明,更大的一般焦虑和儿科育儿压力与父母报告的更多有问题的儿童行为相关。血糖变异性对这种关系没有显著影响。
患有慢性病的幼儿父母所经历的压力似乎与他们对孩子行为问题的认知有关。父母对发育正常的行为问题的体验可能会干扰疾病管理,并加剧父母的压力以及随后对幸福感的影响。讨论了对支持患有T1D的父母和儿童的意义。