Grandparent support for families of children with Down's syndrome
Grandparent support for families of children with Down's syndrome
Background: although grandparents are recognized as an important source of support for families of children with intellectual and other disabilities, there has been very little research in this area. The aim of the present paper is to present a brief overview of the literature, and to present data from a preliminary study of relationships between parental stress and grandparent support and conflict.
Methods: sixty-one parents of children with Down's syndrome (34 mothers and 27 fathers) completed questionnaires on grandparent support and conflict. Parents also completed the Friedrich Short Form of the Questionnaire on Resources and Stress (QRS) with scoring amended to include a depression sub-scale.
Results: the main findings were: (1) grandparent support and conflict were associated with mothers' but not fathers' ratings of stress on the QRS, and (2) both grandparent support and conflict made independent contributions to the prediction of mothers' stress on at least one dimension of the QRS.
Conclusions: practical implications of the results for interventions designed to encourage grandparent support for families are discussed. Issues for further research and methodological problems with the study are also identified
97-104
Hastings, Richard P.
4fd1ea2a-233f-461b-94c0-769e7d9e2c3c
Thomas, Hannah
ad78ea70-1d1c-4160-9f53-9793f4e8bb0d
Delwiche, Nicole
87456a54-d400-4956-ae6c-f239010b64a3
March 2002
Hastings, Richard P.
4fd1ea2a-233f-461b-94c0-769e7d9e2c3c
Thomas, Hannah
ad78ea70-1d1c-4160-9f53-9793f4e8bb0d
Delwiche, Nicole
87456a54-d400-4956-ae6c-f239010b64a3
Hastings, Richard P., Thomas, Hannah and Delwiche, Nicole
(2002)
Grandparent support for families of children with Down's syndrome.
Journal of Applied Research in Intellectual Disabilities, 15 (1), .
(doi:10.1046/j.1360 2322.2001.00097.x).
Abstract
Background: although grandparents are recognized as an important source of support for families of children with intellectual and other disabilities, there has been very little research in this area. The aim of the present paper is to present a brief overview of the literature, and to present data from a preliminary study of relationships between parental stress and grandparent support and conflict.
Methods: sixty-one parents of children with Down's syndrome (34 mothers and 27 fathers) completed questionnaires on grandparent support and conflict. Parents also completed the Friedrich Short Form of the Questionnaire on Resources and Stress (QRS) with scoring amended to include a depression sub-scale.
Results: the main findings were: (1) grandparent support and conflict were associated with mothers' but not fathers' ratings of stress on the QRS, and (2) both grandparent support and conflict made independent contributions to the prediction of mothers' stress on at least one dimension of the QRS.
Conclusions: practical implications of the results for interventions designed to encourage grandparent support for families are discussed. Issues for further research and methodological problems with the study are also identified
This record has no associated files available for download.
More information
Published date: March 2002
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 57657
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/57657
ISSN: 1360-2322
PURE UUID: f2f34f2c-a184-4493-afe5-2c06c9d3afce
Catalogue record
Date deposited: 18 Aug 2008
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 11:08
Export record
Altmetrics
Contributors
Author:
Richard P. Hastings
Author:
Hannah Thomas
Author:
Nicole Delwiche
Download statistics
Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.
View more statistics