Parenting stress, anxiety, and depression in mothers with visually impaired infants: a cross-sectional and longitudinal cohort analysis

作者:Sakkalou Elena; Sakki Hanna; O'reilly Michelle A.; Salt Alison T.; Dale Naomi J.*
来源:Developmental Medicine and Child Neurology, 2018, 60(3): 290-298.
DOI:10.1111/dmcn.13633

摘要

AimThis study examined cross-sectional and longitudinal patterns of parenting stress, adult anxiety, and depression in mothers of children with profound or severe visual impairment (PVI or SVI) at 1 year and 2years of age.
MethodMothers of a national longitudinal cohort (OPTIMUM Project) of infants with congenital disorders of the peripheral visual system and PVI (light perception at best) or SVI (basic form' vision of non-light reflecting objects) participated. Infant age at baseline (T-1) was 8 to 16months. Mothers completed the Parenting Stress Index - Short Form and the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale at T-1 (n=79) and at follow-up 12 months later (T-2) (n=73).
ResultsMothers of the total group had higher parenting stress levels (34.6% in clinical range) than community normative data at T-1 (p=0.017). Mothers of infants in the PVI subgroup had elevated stress at T-1 (p=0.014) and T-2 (p=0.009). The PVI subgroup was also elevated in the Difficult Child subscale at T-2 (p=0.001). Within-sample differences in parenting stress between the visual impairment subgroups were found at T-2 only: the PVI subgroup scored higher than the SVI subgroup (p=0.029). Adult anxiety and depression in the total group were not elevated compared with community normative data at T-1 and T-2; however, higher parenting stress was related to raised adult anxiety and depression levels at T-1 and T-2 (p=0.001). Regression analysis found parenting stress and lower child vision level (T-1) predicted parenting stress (T-2) (p=0.001; 42% variance).
InterpretationMothers of 1-year-old infants with visual impairment showed raised risk for parenting stress, which continued to be elevated for children with PVI and those perceived as difficult' at 2 years. This was also a psychological risk, with greater adult anxiety and depression in those mothers with raised parenting stress. The clinical significance is that identification of parenting stress and targeted parenting, and behavioural support of the child in the first years of life is highly indicated.

  • 出版日期2018-3