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Journal Article

Citation

Muscara F, McCarthy MC, Thompson EJ, Heaney CM, Hearps SJC, Rayner M, Burke K, Nicholson JM, Anderson VA. J. Trauma. Stress 2017; 30(3): 237-244.

Affiliation

Psychology Service, Royal Children's Hospital, Melbourne, Australia.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2017, International Society for Traumatic Stress Studies, Publisher John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1002/jts.22193

PMID

28644537

Abstract

This study investigated factors associated with acute stress symptoms in parents of seriously ill children across a range of illnesses and treatment settings within a pediatric hospital setting. It was hypothesized that psychosocial variables would be more strongly associated with acute stress responses than demographic and child illness variables. Participants were 115 mothers and 56 fathers of children treated within the oncology, cardiology, and intensive care departments of a pediatric hospital. Acute stress, psychosocial, demographic, and medical data were collected within the first 4 weeks of the child's hospital admission. A robust hierarchical regression model revealed that psychosocial factors significantly explained 36.8% of the variance in parent acute stress responses (p <.001); demographic variables significantly added a further 4.5% (p =.022), but illness-related factors did not contribute to the model.

FINDINGS support the implementation of a general psychosocial screening approach for parents across the wider hospital system, and that psychosocial risk factors may be targeted in interventions across different illnesses and treatment settings to improve parent outcomes.

Copyright © 2017 International Society for Traumatic Stress Studies.


Language: en

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