‘We are dealing with it the best we can’: Exploring parents’ attributions regarding their child’s physical disability using the ‘Four Ws’ framework

@article{Zschorn2016WeAD,
  title={‘We are dealing with it the best we can’: Exploring parents’ attributions regarding their child’s physical disability using the ‘Four Ws’ framework},
  author={Melissa Zschorn and Rosalyn H. Shute},
  journal={Clinical Child Psychology and Psychiatry},
  year={2016},
  volume={21},
  pages={416 - 431}
}
  • M. Zschorn, R. Shute
  • Published 1 July 2016
  • Psychology
  • Clinical Child Psychology and Psychiatry
Background: When a child has a disability, parents’ adaptation has traditionally been viewed in negative terms (e.g. grief and stress). However, recent research suggests that parents’ adaptation is determined by their appraisals of their situation, both positive and negative. It would be valuable for clinicians to have a conceptual framework for exploring such cognitions. Aims: This study aimed, first, to devise an attribution theory–based framework for understanding parental cognitions and… 
Active Coping Efforts Temper Negative Attributions of Disability Stigma
The current research examined attributional evaluations and health perceptions of targets with various disabilities and explored the role that government assistance and coping played in shaping these
A comparative study of socioeconomic status, perceived social support and psychological distress of mothers of children with and without disabilities
TLDR
Mothers of children with disabilities perceived high levels of overall social support, which might have reduced their psychological distress and it is recommended for rehabilitation centres to organise support groups for family members.
Paradigm Regained—The Integrated Bullying Framework
The Possibility of School Counselor’s Attributions Changing by Location

References

SHOWING 1-10 OF 49 REFERENCES
When resources get sparse: A longitudinal, qualitative study of emotions, coping and resource-creation when parenting a young child with severe disabilities
TLDR
It was found that parents continually created and sustained their personal resources through positive cognitive reappraisals of their circumstances, the consequences of those circumstances and their coping possibilities, and a theory of resource-creation was proposed as an addition to the current understanding of coping and the role of positive emotions.
Parenting stress in mothers of children with an intellectual disability: the effects of parental cognitions in relation to child characteristics and family support.
TLDR
The results indicated that most of the variance in parenting stress was explained by parental locus of control, parenting satisfaction and child behaviour difficulties, and these results have implications for clinical interventions for promoting parents' coping strategies in managing children with ID and behavioural difficulties.
The disability paradox: high quality of life against all odds.
Parents of Children with Disabilities: Resilience, Coping, and Future Expectations
On the basis of characteristics of family resilience, the study examined the perspectives of parents of children with an intellectual, physical, or learning disability. Thirty-two parents were
Family well-being and disabled children: a psychosocial model of disability-related child behaviour problems.
  • L. Woolfson
  • Psychology, Medicine
    British journal of health psychology
  • 2004
TLDR
The psychosocial model of disability-related child behaviour problems provides a useful conceptual framework that has both clinical and research implications for professionals working with families with disabled children.
Preschool children with and without developmental delay: behaviour problems, parents' optimism and well-being.
TLDR
Interventions for parents that aim to enhance both parenting skills and psychological well-being should be available in preschool, and it may be beneficial for such programmes to focus not only on behaviour management strategies aimed at child behaviour change, but also on parents' belief systems, with the aim of increasing dispositional optimism.
Effects of Behavior Problems, Family Functioning, and Family Coping on Parent Stress in Families with a Child with Smith-Magenis Syndrome
Smith Magenis Syndrome (SMS) is a rare genetic syndrome most commonly caused by a microdeletion on chromosome 17 p11.2. It is associated with a pattern of physical, developmental, and behavioral
Parents attributions of blame for the birth of a child with down syndrome: A pilot study
TLDR
A study assessing whether failure to detect a problem on screening, in this case Down syndrome not detected during prenatal screening, is associated with blame and poor adjustment in parents found mothers and fathers who blamed others reported significantly higher parenting stress.
Predictors of distress and well-being in parents of young children with developmental delays and disabilities: the importance of parent perceptions.
TLDR
Parent coping variables were the strongest predictors of both positive gain and parental distress, with reframing emerging as a predictor ofpositive gain and parent empowerment emerging asA predictor of both greater positive gainand lower parental distress.
Parental stress attributed to family members with and without disability: A longitudinal study
TLDR
It is concluded that the stress attributed to any specific child may be an indicator of more general family stress and the strength of parental worry decreased from time 1 to 2, but the pattern of worries did not change over time, and nor did the specific foci of worry differentiate low-stressed from high-st stressed parents.
...
1
2
3
4
5
...