Department of Family and Community Health, School of Nursing, University of Pennsylvania, United States of America; Research Institute, Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, United States of America.
Department of Family and Community Health, School of Nursing, University of Pennsylvania, United States of America; University of Haifa, Department of Nursing, Israel.
J Pediatr Nurs. 2023 Mar-Apr;69:93-100. doi: 10.1016/j.pedn.2022.12.016. Epub 2023 Jan 23.
To explore the relationships between growth trajectory, parenting stress and parent post-traumatic stress (PTS), in infants with congenital heart disease, and the moderating role of parents' dyadic adjustment on those associations.
A secondary analysis of data from the REACH Telehalth home monitoring multi-site randomized clinical trial. Parents completed the Parenting Stress Index (PSI), Post-traumatic diagnostic scale, and the Dyadic Adjustment Scale. Multivariate logistic regression models were used to examine the associations of interest.
During 4-month follow-up after hospital discharge, parents of infants with 'Never recovered' and 'Partially recovered' growth trajectories had 2-5 times higher odds of experiencing higher stress on the Parent Domain (OR = 4.8, CI = 1.3-18.0; OR = 2.5, CI = 1.0-5.9, respectively) than those with stably grown infants. Parents of "Never recovered" infants had 4 times higher odds of PTS symptoms (OR = 3.9; CI = 1.6-9.9). Parental dyadic adjustment moderated the relationships. Parents of 'Partially recovered' infants and having low dyadic adjustment had 3-5 times higher odds of high stress on all PSI domains, while parents with high dyadic adjustment did not have increased stress due to poor infant growth. Parents of "Never recovered" infants had four times higher odds of PTS symptom, even with high dyadic adjustment.
Infant growth trajectory over the first four months is associated with parenting stress and PTS. Quality of partner relationship moderates some of these associations.
Infant growth should serve as a screening aid for identifying parents at psychological risk. Interventions targeting the quality of partner relationship may support parental coping and mitigate stress.
NCT01941667.
探讨先天性心脏病婴儿的生长轨迹、父母压力与父母创伤后应激(PTS)之间的关系,以及父母对偶调整对这些关联的调节作用。
对 REACH Telehalth 家庭监测多地点随机临床试验数据的二次分析。父母完成了父母压力指数(PSI)、创伤后诊断量表和对偶调整量表。使用多变量逻辑回归模型来检验感兴趣的关联。
在出院后 4 个月的随访期间,“从未恢复”和“部分恢复”生长轨迹婴儿的父母在父母领域经历更高压力的可能性高出 2-5 倍(OR=4.8,CI=1.3-18.0;OR=2.5,CI=1.0-5.9),而稳定生长婴儿的父母则高出 2-5 倍。“从未恢复”婴儿的父母出现 PTS 症状的可能性高出 4 倍(OR=3.9;CI=1.6-9.9)。父母对偶调整调节了这些关系。“部分恢复”婴儿的父母和对偶调整低的父母在所有 PSI 领域出现高压力的可能性高出 3-5 倍,而对偶调整高的父母则不会因婴儿生长不良而增加压力。“从未恢复”婴儿的父母即使对偶调整高,也有四倍以上出现 PTS 症状的可能性。
婴儿出生后前四个月的生长轨迹与育儿压力和 PTS 有关。伴侣关系质量调节了这些关联中的一些。
婴儿的生长应作为识别有心理风险的父母的筛查辅助手段。针对伴侣关系质量的干预措施可能有助于父母应对压力并减轻压力。
NCT01941667。