Ullenhag A, Bult M K, Nyquist A, Ketelaar M, Jahnsen R, Krumlinde-Sundholm L, Almqvist L, Granlund M
Department of Women's and Children's Health, Karolinska Institutet, Neuropediatric unit, Astrid Lindgren Children's Hospital, Stockholm, Sweden.
Dev Neurorehabil. 2012;15(5):369-85. doi: 10.3109/17518423.2012.694915.
To investigate whether there are differences in participation in leisure activities between children with and without disabilities in Sweden, Norway and the Netherlands and how much personal and environmental factors explain leisure performance.
In a cross-sectional analytic design, the Children's Assessment of Participation and Enjoyment, CAPE, was performed with 278 children with disabilities and 599 children without disabilities aged 6-17 years. A one-way between-groups ANOVA explored the differences in participation between the countries. Hierarchical multiple regression analysis assessed if age, gender, educational level, living area and country of residence explained the variance in participation.
Scandinavian children with disabilities participated in more activities with higher frequency compared to Dutch children. The strongest predictor was country of residence. For children without disabilities, differences existed in informal activities, the strongest predictor was gender.
Differences in school- and support systems between the countries seem to influence patterns of participation, affecting children with disabilities most.
调查瑞典、挪威和荷兰残疾儿童与非残疾儿童在参与休闲活动方面是否存在差异,以及个人和环境因素对休闲表现的解释程度。
采用横断面分析设计,对278名6至17岁的残疾儿童和599名非残疾儿童进行了儿童参与和享受情况评估(CAPE)。单向组间方差分析探讨了各国之间参与情况的差异。分层多元回归分析评估了年龄、性别、教育水平、居住地区和居住国是否能解释参与情况的差异。
与荷兰儿童相比,斯堪的纳维亚残疾儿童参与更多活动且频率更高。最强的预测因素是居住国。对于非残疾儿童,在非正式活动方面存在差异,最强的预测因素是性别。
各国在学校和支持系统方面的差异似乎会影响参与模式,对残疾儿童的影响最大。