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Jan Blacher, Ph'D'

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Robert Rueda, Ph.D. USC. Johanna Shapiro, Ph.D. UCI ... Family Impact Questionnaire (FIQ) (Donenberg & Baker) Parenting Stress Index (PSI) (Abidin) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Jan Blacher, Ph'D'


1
Family well-being The case for a new family
autism resource center at UC Riverside
Jan Blacher, Ph.D. Professor and Faculty
Chair Graduate School of Education University of
California, Riverside
Presentation for this Autism Conference University
of Redlands
2
Overview of my topic for today
  • Importance of studying families
  • Family well being
  • Stress, depression, coping,
  • positive perceptions
  • Influences on family well being
  • Child challenges
  • Parent resources and cognitions
  • Cultural beliefs and practices
  • Family isnt just Mom
  • Take away points


3
UCR FAMILIES PROJECT PSU/UCLA/UCR Collaborative
Family Study
  • Faculty Collaborators (Current Recent)
  • Bruce L. Baker, Ph.D.UCLA
  • Keith Crnic, Ph.D. PSU, Arizona State
  • Craig Edelbrock, PSU
  • Bonnie Kraemer, Ph.D. SDSU
  • Steve Lopez, Ph.D. UCLA
  • Robert Rueda, Ph.D. USC
  • Johanna Shapiro, Ph.D. UCI
  • Laura Lee McIntyre, Ph.D. Syracuse University
  • SEARCH Staff
  • www.searchcenter.ucr.edu
  • Erica Howell, Araksia Kaladjian, Stacy
    Lauderdale, Rhonda Welch-Scalco

Supported by NICHD HD21324,
34879-1459
4
Why study families?
5
Family Facts
  • Parent psychological adjustment is adversely
    affected when there is a child with a disability,
    some positive impact notwithstanding.
  • Persons with intellectual disability are about
    three times as likely as typically developing
    persons to have serious behavior challenges or
    psychiatric disorder.
  • Family dynamics are reciprocal over time
    children influence parents and parents influence
    children.

6
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7
How do researchers assess parents well-being?
  • Negative aspects of well-being
  • Parenting stress
  • Depression
  • Positive aspects of well-being
  • Coping
  • Positive perceptions

8
Commonly used measures of well-being
  • Stress
  • Family Impact Questionnaire (FIQ) (Donenberg
    Baker)
  • Parenting Stress Index (PSI) (Abidin)
  • Questionnaire on Resources
  • and Stress (QRS QRS-F)
  • (Holroyd/Friedrich, Greenberg, Crnic)

9
Family Stress by Child Age
Wikler, L.M. (1986). Periodic stresses of
families of older mentally retarded children An
exploratory study. American Journal on Mental
Retardation, 90, 703-706.
10
Commonly used measures of well-being(con.)
  • Depression
  • Beck Depression Inventory (BDI). (Beck)
  • Center for Epidemiological Studies Depression
    Scale (CES-D). (Radloff)

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12
Assessing positive perceptionsHastings Taunt
(2002)
  • Direct measures
  • Ask parents (semi-structured interviews)
  • Administer measure with a positive perception or
    positive impact scale
  • Indirect measures
  • Assess absence of stress, depression
  • Assess presence of perceived competence, life
    satisfaction, or the like

13
Families studied
  • Sample 1. UC Riverside Families Project
  • Young adults with mod/sev
    ID
  • N 282 young adults and families
  • Data presented here Assessed once
  • (ages 16 to 26 years)
  • Sample 2 . Collaborative Family Study
  • PSU/UCLA/UCR
  • Children with or without ID
  • N 239 children/families
  • Data presented here
    Assessed at 3, 4, and 5 years

14
What do children bring to the family environment?
Mothers Negative Impact (Stress) by Delay
Status Groups
Negative Impact
Collaborative Family Families Project,
Study, preschoolers young adults


15
Mothers Negative Impact by Delay Status, Across
TimeCollaborative Family Study
Negative Impact
Child age in months Delay
status F 23.53, p lt .001
16
What do children bring to the family environment?
Mothers Depression by Delay Status Groups
Depression Symptoms

Delay Status
17
What do children bring to the family environment?
Mothers Positive Impact by Delay Status Groups
Positive Impact

Delay Status
18
What do children bring to the family environment?
Child Clinical Range Behavioral Challenges
Clinical Behavior Disorders ()

REISS SCREEN Clinical Range
CBCL Clinical Range
19
What do children bring to the family environment?
Childs behavior problems and mothers negative
impact (stress). Collaborative Family Study
Negative Impact
Behavior Problems F (2, 219) 43.50 p lt
.0001 Delay Status F 2.13 p ns
20
Syndrome Specificity Early Childhood Data Child
Total CBCL T scores by age of assessment and
diagnostic group
21
Well Being and Behavior Problems, by Syndrome
Families Project (Young Adults)
n112 n87 n59 n23
n112 n87 n59 n23
22
Psychological well-being and coping in mothers of
youths with autism, Down syndrome, or fragile X
syndrome(Source Abbeduto et al., 2004).
23
What do parents bring to the family
environment?Parental personality trait
Optimism
  • ? Optimism and Pessimism are defined as
    generalized positive and negative outcome
    expectancies. These represent relatively stable
    individual difference variables that promote or
    abate psychological well-being (Sheir Carver,
    1985).
  • ? Optimists have a favorable outlook on life,
    believe that good rather than bad things will
    happen to them, and consequently are more likely
    than pessimists to face adversity and stress with
    continued effort (Olason Roger, 2001).

24
The child behavior problems mother well-being
relationship is buffered by optimism/pessimism
Child behavior problems (Low vs. High)
25
What do parents bring to the family
environment? The child behavior problems
mother stress relationship is buffered by
mothers perceived positive impact of the child.
Collaborative Family Study

Negative Impact (Stress)
Child behavior problems
Behavior Problems F89.26 p lt .001
Positive Impact F15.50 p
lt .001 BP X POS
F 5.18 p .006
26
Culture MattersWhat is the influence of
culture on parents coping with disability?
27
UCR Families Project Findings on Depression

Total CES-D Score
28
Well Being by Sample Group
29
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31
Mothers Positive Impact by Delay Status Groups
Positive Impact

Delay Status
32
Positive Impact, by Child Delay Status and Parent
Ethnicity, Caucasian (non-Latino) vs. Latino
Mother
Father
Positive Impact
Positive Impact
33
Family isnt just Mom
34
Impact of target child on non-disabled sibling
  • Target child MR at home, MR placed, Control
  • No group differences in sibling adjustment (e.g.
    behavior problems, self esteem, relationships).
  • (Eisenberg, Baker, Blacher, 1998)
  • --------------------------------------------------
    -----------------
  • Target child Autism, MR, Dev. Lang Dis.
  • No group differences in socialization,
    behavior problems, or emotional adjustment.
  • (Pilowsky et al., 2004).

35
Take Away Points
  • The family context of disability is critical to
    study. More needs to be done with respect to
    autism.
  • Family well-being is affected most by child
    behavior challenges (and not disability per se).
  • Parents often hold positive perceptions of their
    child, regardless of phenotype.

36
Take Away Points
  • Siblings of children with autism and other
    disabilities are far less negatively affected
    than previously believed.
  • Family research will evolve as new information
    about genetic underpinnings of neurodevelopmental
    disorders becomes available.
  • Families need to know more about basic research
    findings, as well as their educational
    implications.

37
GRADUATE SCHOOL OF EDUCATION
38
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39
  • The UCR SEARCH Family Autism Resource Center
  • Will be the first UC Center to focus on the needs
    of all families including low-income and Spanish
    speaking families in its mission to provide
    support, education, advocacy, and resources in
    the area of autism
  • spectrum disorder, including Asperger syndrome.
  • Center faculty and graduate students will also
    work
  • in partnership with educational leaders in the
    region
  • to pioneer new educational models and bi-lingual
    instructional strategies designed for use within
    the classroom setting.

40
While most research on autism is justifiably
focused on cause and cure with the eventual
hope for prevention there are hundreds of
thousands of families looking to professionals
for educational and other services that will
help them and their child now.
41
SEARCH Mission Statement The mission of the
University of California, Riverside SEARCH Family
Autism Resource Center is to provide support,
education, advocacy, and resources in the area of
autism spectrum disorder to all families
including low-income and Spanish-speaking
families, bridging the gap between diagnosis and
finding appropriate educational services. In
partnership with local educational leaders in the
region, SEARCH will provide information on
evidence-based educational models and
instructional strategies designed for use within
the classroom setting.
42
  • SEARCH will help families of all income levels
    and
  • educational backgrounds to
  • Receive proper diagnosis and treatment
  • Learn about the disorder and intervention
    options
  • Access educational, medical, social support,
    and legal services
  • Obtain guidance and support for at-home care
  • and treatment
  • Ease the transition from early childhood to
    kindergarten

?The UCR SEARCH Family Autism Resource Center,
established by GSOE Faculty Chair, Dr. Jan
Blacher, will be the first UC Center to focus on
the needs of all families including low-income
and Spanish speaking families in its mission to
provide support, education, advocacy, and
resources in the area of autism spectrum
disorder, including Asperger syndrome. Center
faculty and graduate students will also work in
partnership with educational leaders in the
region to pioneer new educational models and
bi-lingual instructional strategies designed for
use within the classroom setting.
43
  • Current Supporters of SEARCH
  • Doug Flutie Jr. Foundation for Autism, Inc.
  • Barona Valley Ranch and Casino
  • UCR Graduate School of Education
  • Individual donors

44
Founders Circle and Professional Advisory
Board As SEARCH is still a relatively new
establishment on the University of California,
Riverside campus, members of a Founders Circle,
along with a Professional Advisory Board, are
currently being assembled and connected to the
SEARCH Center.
45
Contact Information for SEARCH Marie
Schultz Director of Development Graduate School
of Education 951.827.6388 marie.schultz_at_ucr.edu D
r. Jan Blacher Faculty Chair Graduate School of
Education 951.827.3875 jan.blacher_at_ucr.edu
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