The relationship between behavioural problems in preschool children and parental distress after a paediatric burn event
The relationship between behavioural problems in preschool children and parental distress after a paediatric burn event
This study examines mother- and father-rated emotional and behaviour problems in and worries about 0- to 5-year-old children at 3 and 12 months after a burn event and the relation with parental distress. Mothers (n = 150) and fathers (n = 125) representing 155 children participated in this study. Child emotional and behaviour problems and parental worries about the child were assessed with the Child Behavior Checklist at both time points. Parents’ level of acute subjective distress was assessed within the first month after the burn event with the Impact of Event Scale. Mothers and fathers held comparable views of their child’s emotional and behaviour problems, which were generally within the normal limits. Parents’ own acute stress reactions were significantly related to parent-rated child behaviour problems at 3 and 12 months postburn. A substantial part of mothers’ and fathers’ worries about the child concerned physical and emotional aspects of the burn trauma, and potential future social problems. Parents with high acute stress scores more often reported burn-related concerns about their child at 3 and 12 months postburn. Health-care professionals should be informed that parents’ distress in the subacute phase of their child’s burn event may be related to subsequent worries about their child and to (parent-observed) child emotional and behaviour problems. The authors recommend a family perspective, with particular attention for the interplay between parents’ distress and parent-reported child behaviour problems and worries, in each phase of paediatric burn care.
813-822
Bakker, Anne
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van der Heijden, Peter G.M.
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van Son, Maarten J.M.
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van de Schoot, Rens
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Vandermeulen, Els
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Helsen, Ann
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Van Loey, Nancy E.E.
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1 September 2014
Bakker, Anne
96f8a96b-dfa9-4215-9305-3e6e3849c475
van der Heijden, Peter G.M.
85157917-3b33-4683-81be-713f987fd612
van Son, Maarten J.M.
5cef805c-86ba-4d8b-a930-8cdbc4eb51b7
van de Schoot, Rens
abdbf497-1f54-4f27-a989-31777650ef41
Vandermeulen, Els
be463def-0d4c-4202-b71c-f17cf02e5d22
Helsen, Ann
18110460-a2d6-43bd-855a-27961886ce0b
Van Loey, Nancy E.E.
f1df914e-e0bc-4d9d-afd3-1cec49ac763d
Bakker, Anne, van der Heijden, Peter G.M., van Son, Maarten J.M., van de Schoot, Rens, Vandermeulen, Els, Helsen, Ann and Van Loey, Nancy E.E.
(2014)
The relationship between behavioural problems in preschool children and parental distress after a paediatric burn event.
European Child & Adolescent Psychiatry, 23 (9), .
(doi:10.1007/s00787-014-0518-y).
(PMID:24488185)
Abstract
This study examines mother- and father-rated emotional and behaviour problems in and worries about 0- to 5-year-old children at 3 and 12 months after a burn event and the relation with parental distress. Mothers (n = 150) and fathers (n = 125) representing 155 children participated in this study. Child emotional and behaviour problems and parental worries about the child were assessed with the Child Behavior Checklist at both time points. Parents’ level of acute subjective distress was assessed within the first month after the burn event with the Impact of Event Scale. Mothers and fathers held comparable views of their child’s emotional and behaviour problems, which were generally within the normal limits. Parents’ own acute stress reactions were significantly related to parent-rated child behaviour problems at 3 and 12 months postburn. A substantial part of mothers’ and fathers’ worries about the child concerned physical and emotional aspects of the burn trauma, and potential future social problems. Parents with high acute stress scores more often reported burn-related concerns about their child at 3 and 12 months postburn. Health-care professionals should be informed that parents’ distress in the subacute phase of their child’s burn event may be related to subsequent worries about their child and to (parent-observed) child emotional and behaviour problems. The authors recommend a family perspective, with particular attention for the interplay between parents’ distress and parent-reported child behaviour problems and worries, in each phase of paediatric burn care.
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Published date: 1 September 2014
Organisations:
Social Statistics & Demography
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Local EPrints ID: 369723
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/369723
ISSN: 1018-8827
PURE UUID: 9349028e-2d60-419e-8f1a-7b62fac317f6
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Date deposited: 06 Oct 2014 11:21
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:46
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Contributors
Author:
Anne Bakker
Author:
Maarten J.M. van Son
Author:
Rens van de Schoot
Author:
Els Vandermeulen
Author:
Ann Helsen
Author:
Nancy E.E. Van Loey
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