Publication | Closed Access
Factors Predicting Distress Among Caregivers to Children with Chronic Medical Conditions
130
Citations
23
References
1996
Year
Mental HealthSocial Determinants Of HealthChild Mental HealthExplored Informant DifferencesFamily HealthPrimary CareSociodemographic FactorsPublic HealthChild Well-beingPsychiatryCaregiverPsychosocial FactorPsychosocial IssueChronic Medical ConditionsChild DevelopmentNursingChild HealthPediatricsMedicineCaregiver DistressChild Psychiatry
Explored informant differences and assessed the importance of sociodemographic factors, child health status characteristics, and caregiver burden to variability in psychological symptoms among caregivers to 116 children with chronic medical conditions. Important informant effects were found. Caregiver-reported, but not physician-reported, burden was an important predictor. Severity of illness, whether rated by physician or caregiver, had little predictive effect whereas child impairment predicted greater distress, independent of sociodemographics. Lower family income and female child sex predicted caregiver distress independent of other variables. Even among families with higher income, those with the lowest income report much higher distress. Results are discussed in terms of the importance of informant choice and the use of sociodemographics as primary rather than control variables in studies of the families of chronically ill children.
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