Centre for Appearance Research, Faculty of Health and Applied Sciences, University of the West of England, Bristol, UK.
Nursing and Midwifery, Faculty of Health and Applied Sciences, University of the West of England, Bristol, UK.
Dev Neurorehabil. 2021 Aug;24(6):418-428. doi: 10.1080/17518423.2021.1901150. Epub 2021 Apr 14.
Children and young people (CYP) with appearance-affecting conditions/injuries report common pervasive psychosocial difficulties, regardless of cause, nature or extent of their visible differences. Parents or carers can also experience psychosocial difficulties and challenges specific to having CYP with a visible difference. Current literature is confined to exploring condition-specific concerns of parents, typically in more prevalent appearance-affecting conditions/injuries, whilst the experiences of parents of CYP with other visible differences are unknown. Thirty-one interviews (parents n = 20, health and support professionals n = 11) and 4 parent focus groups (n = 25) were conducted. Three overarching themes were constructed: "Appearance does(n't) matter" describes the impact of having a child with a socially undesirable appearance; "Being 'battle' ready" reflects parents' desire to arm their child with resources to manage challenges, whilst "Walking the tightrope" reflects parents' lack of clarity about how best to approach this. Findings highlight shared and common cross-condition psychosocial difficulties among parents and carers.
患有影响外貌的疾病/损伤的儿童和青少年(CYP)无论其可见差异的原因、性质或程度如何,都会报告常见的普遍心理社会困难。父母或照顾者也可能会遇到特定于有可见差异的 CYP 的心理社会困难和挑战。现有文献仅限于探索父母对特定于病情的担忧,通常是在更常见的影响外貌的疾病/损伤中,而对于其他可见差异的 CYP 父母的经历则不得而知。进行了 31 次访谈(父母 n = 20,健康和支持专业人员 n = 11)和 4 次家长焦点小组(n = 25)。构建了三个总体主题:“外表不重要”描述了孩子外表不受欢迎的影响;“准备好战斗”反映了父母希望为孩子提供资源以应对挑战的愿望,而“走钢丝”则反映了父母对如何最好地处理这种情况缺乏明确性。研究结果强调了父母和照顾者之间存在共同的跨病情心理社会困难。