4.3 Article

Association between Participation of Children with Disabilities and the Child, Family, and Environmental Factors in Shanghai, China: A Cross-Sectional Study

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijerph20010615

Keywords

children; caregiver report; disability; participation; association

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Participation is crucial for a child's well-being, but children with disabilities may face limitations. This study examined the association between participation of disabled children and various factors. The results showed that a significant percentage of disabled children had limited participation in home, school, and community activities. Child and family factors were found to significantly influence participation in different settings.
Participation is essential to a child's health and well-being, whereas children with disabilities may lack the associated benefits because of physical restrictions. This study aims to examine the association between the participation of children with disabilities and the child, family, and environmental factors. A total of 433 children with disabilities aged 3-18 and their family caregivers were included. Three binary logistic regression models were respectively established to identify the significant factors associated with children's home, school, and community participation. Our main empirical results showed that among 433 children with disabilities, 44.3%, 47.6%, and 58.7% of them never or seldom participated in home, school, and community activities. Child and family factors were found to be dominantly associated with children's participation, and significant factors associated with the home, school, and community participation of children were different, including children's disability type, sleep problems and emotional stability, caregivers' education, mental HRQOL, rehabilitation belief, and number of children in the family. These results highlight that the participation of children with disabilities in mainland China urgently needs to be enhanced, and further research might be focused on validating the causal relationships between participation and significant child and family factors identified in this study.

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