Publication | Open Access
Factors Associated with the Anxiety, Subjective Psychological Well-Being and Self-Esteem of Parents of Blind Children
35
Citations
51
References
2016
Year
Family MedicineQuality Of LifeBlind ChildrenFamily InvolvementDisabilityMental HealthChild Mental HealthSocial ImpairmentSocial SciencesPsychologyDevelopmental PsychologyFamily ContextSubjective Psychological Well-beingFamily InteractionSocial-emotional DevelopmentFamily LifeSelf-esteemChild PsychologyChild Well-beingPsychological DeprivationVisual ImpairmentChild DevelopmentPediatricsFamily PsychologyMedicine
The objective was to examine the connection of the personal, social and family context, educational variables with the levels of anxiety, subjective psychological well-being and self-esteem in a sample of 61 parents of blind children. Results suggest that parents present less anxiety when they have only one child, possess a technical degree, receive remuneration for their work, their child's visual impairment is not progressive, their knowledge about their child's disability is appropriate, and their leisure and labour possibilities have not been affected. Their psychological well-being is higher when they are married in first nuptials and perceive that their health is good. Their well-being is negatively related to reduced leisure, and self-esteem is lower when labour possibilities have been affected. In order for these families to achieve a more pleasant life, with greater psychological well-being, lower anxiety and higher self-esteem, professionals should be aware of the aspects with a negative impact.
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