1998
DOI: 10.1093/oxfordjournals.bjsw.a011403
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Informal Carers of Adolescents and Adults with Learning Difficulties from the South Asian Communities: Family Circumstances, Service Support and Carer Stress

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Cited by 52 publications
(52 citation statements)
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“…For instance, it is suggested that there is need to involve and employ more Korean professionals in mainstream health care fields in order to improve communication between carers and service users. A similar suggestion was raised in the study carried out by Hatton, Azmi, Caine, and Emerson (1998). They noted that, in order to improve services for Asian communities, there is a need to improve communication between Asian families and services.…”
Section: Looking To the Futurementioning
confidence: 53%
“…For instance, it is suggested that there is need to involve and employ more Korean professionals in mainstream health care fields in order to improve communication between carers and service users. A similar suggestion was raised in the study carried out by Hatton, Azmi, Caine, and Emerson (1998). They noted that, in order to improve services for Asian communities, there is a need to improve communication between Asian families and services.…”
Section: Looking To the Futurementioning
confidence: 53%
“…In fact, studies show that these carers receive little support from their families, and that other types of informal support, such as that provided by support groups, temples or mosques play only a minor supporting role [31], [32], [33]. In addition, health professionals may hold negative or discriminatory attitudes towards this group.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Items were drawn from two previous UK studies involving the translation of survey questions into several South Asian languages; a study of 54 South Asian family carers of an adult with intellectual disabilities (Hatton, Azmi, Caine, & Emerson, 1998) and a survey of 587 parents of children with severe disabilities across a range of minority ethnic communities (Chamba, Ahmad, Hirst, Lawton, & Beresford, 1999). Information collected included the following: the main carer (age, gender, marital status, religion, ethnicity, relationship to child with disabilities, time in UK, language); the child with disabilities (age, gender); household composition; home ownership; suitability of house for looking after child with disabilities; employment status of interviewee and spouse/ partner; weekly take-home income (income bands 5$185; $185-$368; $370-$553; $555-$738; $740þ); family ownership of a car.…”
Section: (3) Previous Use In Research With Uk Southmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…(1) General parental distress was assessed using the 24-item Malaise Inventory (Rutter, Tizard, & Whitmore, 1970) using translated versions produced for a previous study of UK South Asian families with an adult with intellectual disabilities (Hatton et al, 1998). Total scores can also be converted into threshold scores (six or above), where the person is thought to be at risk of psychological disorder.…”
Section: (3) Previous Use In Research With Uk Southmentioning
confidence: 99%