2019
DOI: 10.1111/jar.12594
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Comparing parental stress of children with neurodevelopmental disorders: The case of Williams syndrome, Down syndrome and autism spectrum disorders

Abstract: Background Although parental stress is higher for children with neurodevelopmental disorders (NDs), it is unclear how this stress compares to more common NDs. The current study compared stress in parents of children with Williams syndrome (WS), Down syndrome (DS) and autism spectrum disorders (ASD). The impact of individual and contextual factors was also explored. Method Parents of children with WS (n = 107), DS (n = 79) and ASD (n = 79) completed a background questionnaire, a parental stress questionnaire an… Show more

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Cited by 43 publications
(46 citation statements)
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“…This relationship appeared to be specific to musical activities, as non-musical family activities were not associated with attachment when controlling for these parenting and demographic variables. Greater parenting stress and anxiety are frequently observed in parents of children with specific developmental disabilities, and as evident in the current study and prior literature, both stress and parenting efficacy relate to parent-child attachment (Ashworth et al, 2019;Goodman & Glenwick, 2012;Keenan et al, 2016;Phillips et al, 2017). Yet, even when considering these important contributors to parent-child attachment, the current study suggests that music may be a viable medium for supporting the parent-child relationship across developmentally diverse children and families.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 74%
“…This relationship appeared to be specific to musical activities, as non-musical family activities were not associated with attachment when controlling for these parenting and demographic variables. Greater parenting stress and anxiety are frequently observed in parents of children with specific developmental disabilities, and as evident in the current study and prior literature, both stress and parenting efficacy relate to parent-child attachment (Ashworth et al, 2019;Goodman & Glenwick, 2012;Keenan et al, 2016;Phillips et al, 2017). Yet, even when considering these important contributors to parent-child attachment, the current study suggests that music may be a viable medium for supporting the parent-child relationship across developmentally diverse children and families.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 74%
“…At the same time, children with ASD, WS, and DS may exhibit impairments in social attention, communication, and emotion regulation and unclear play behaviors, all of which may impact parents' responsiveness and affective attachment to their child (Baptista et al, 2018;Goodman & Glenwick, 2012;Spiker et al, 2002). Also, compared to parents of children with TD, parents of children with developmental disabilities often have elevated levels of parent stress and mental health concerns (Ashworth et al, 2019;Keenan et al, 2016;Pastor-Cerezuela et al, 2020). This is particularly observed in parents of children with ASD and may relate to children's social and behavioral challenges (Eisenhower et al, 2005;Pastor-Cerezuala et al, 2020).…”
Section: Music and Parent-child Affective Attachmentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although children with WBS appear to be hypersociable when compared to ASD children, both populations share deficits in some socio‐communicative skills, such as, in preschool age, difficulty in shared attention, showing or giving objects and, in school age, difficulty in social relationships comprehension, pragmatic use of language, and emotion's recognition [Vivanti et al, 2018]. Reconsidering phenotypes similarities between WBS and ASD has presumably resulted in a renewed interest in cross‐syndrome studies on phenotypical, behavioral, biological and clinical comparison [Glod, Riby, & Rodgers, 2019; Ashworth, Palikara, & Van Herwegen, 2019; Hamner et al, 2019; Baptista et al, 2019; Lew et al, 2020; Ridley, Riby, & Leekam, 2020].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%