4.0 Article

Parental post-traumatic stress, overprotective parenting, and emotional and behavioural problems for children with critical congenital heart disease

Journal

CARDIOLOGY IN THE YOUNG
Volume 32, Issue 5, Pages 738-745

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/S1047951121002912

Keywords

Congenital heart disease; overprotective parenting; post-traumatic stress; post-traumatic stress disorder; neurodevelopmental outcomes

Funding

  1. Institutional Development Award from the National Institute of General Medical Sciences of the National Institutes of Health [U54-GM104941]

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The study explored the relationships between parental post-traumatic stress symptoms, overprotective parenting, and child emotional/behavioral problems in families of children with critical CHD. It found that overprotective parenting fully mediated the association between parental post-traumatic stress symptoms and child emotional/behavioral problems. Both parental post-traumatic stress symptoms and overprotective parenting were identified as modifiable risk factors for poor child outcomes.
Objective: To examine relationships amongst parental post-traumatic stress symptoms, parental post-traumatic growth, overprotective parenting, and child emotional/behavioural problems in families of children with critical CHD. Method: Sixty parents (15 fathers) of children aged 1-6 completed online questionnaires assessing parental post-traumatic stress symptoms and post-traumatic growth, overprotective parenting, and child emotional/behavioural problems. Bivariate correlations and mediational analyses were conducted to evaluate overprotective parenting as a mediator of the association between parental post-traumatic stress symptoms and child emotional/behavioural problems. Results: Parents reported significant post-traumatic stress symptoms, with over 18% meeting criteria for post-traumatic stress disorder and 70% meeting criteria in one or more clusters. Parental post-traumatic growth was positively correlated with intrusion (r = .32, p = .01) but it was not associated with other post-traumatic stress symptom clusters. Parental post-traumatic stress symptoms were positively associated with overprotective parenting (r = .37, p = .008) and total child emotional/behavioural problems (r = .29, p = .037). Overprotective parenting was positively associated with total child emotional/behavioural problems (r = .45, p = .001) and fully mediated the relationship between parental post-traumatic stress symptoms and child emotional/behavioural problems. Conclusion: Overprotective parenting mediates the relationship between parental post-traumatic stress symptoms and child emotional and behavioural problems in families of children with CHD. Both parental post-traumatic stress symptoms and overprotective parenting may be modifiable risk factors for poor child outcomes. This study highlights the need for interventions to prevent or reduce parental post-traumatic stress symptoms and to promote effective parenting following a diagnosis of CHD.

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