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Parental Stress as a Cause and Effect of Pediatric Burn Injury
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1993
Year
Parental StressEducationBurn InjuryMental HealthLess StressPediatric TraumaBurnsStressEarly Life ExposureEarly Life StressChild PsychologyPsychiatryBurn ManagementSocial StressAcute BurnsChild DevelopmentPediatric Burn InjuryPediatricsChildhood TraumaMedicineTrauma In ChildPost-traumatic Stress Disorder
The current study reports assessments of stress for parents of children with acute burns at the time of hospital admission and during the first 5 years after injury. At each assessment, parents of children with burns report neither more nor less stress than a normal population. At the time of admission, parents of children with acute burns do not differ from the normal sample on any of the measures of parenting stress. Parents of recovering children with burns do report significant changes. They report significantly higher depressive symptoms at year 2 after the child's burn injury and lower than normal levels of depression in years 4 and 5 after the child's injury. During the recovery period, these parents also attribute their stress more often to the child with burns, whereas other parents more evenly divide blame among their children and their personal characteristics.