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Coping strategies in mothers and fathers of preschool and school-age children with autism
553
Citations
43
References
2005
Year
Family MedicineFamily InvolvementEducationPositive Coping StrategiesMental HealthPsychologyNeurodiversityDevelopmental PsychologyFamily InteractionAvoidance CopingAutismDevelopmental DisorderChild PsychologyPsychiatryEarly Childhood DevelopmentSchool-age ChildrenChild DevelopmentAutistic WomanFamily PsychologyMedicineParental Coping Strategies
Despite the theoretical and demonstrated empirical significance of parental coping strategies for the wellbeing of families of children with disabilities, relatively little research has focused explicitly on coping in mothers and fathers of children with autism. In the present study, 89 parents of preschool children and 46 parents of school-age children completed a measure of the strategies they used to cope with the stresses of raising their child with autism. Factor analysis revealed four reliable coping dimensions: active avoidance coping, problem-focused coping, positive coping, and religious/denial coping. Further data analysis suggested gender differences on the first two of these dimensions but no reliable evidence that parental coping varied with the age of the child with autism. Associations were also found between coping strategies and parental stress and mental health. Practical implications are considered including reducing reliance on avoidance coping and increasing the use of positive coping strategies.
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