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Risk factors associated with the mental health of fathers of children with an intellectual disability in A ustralia
Author(s) -
Giallo R.,
Seymour M.,
Matthews J.,
GavidiaPayne S.,
Hudson A.,
Cameron C.
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
journal of intellectual disability research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.941
H-Index - 104
eISSN - 1365-2788
pISSN - 0964-2633
DOI - 10.1111/jir.12127
Subject(s) - intellectual disability , mental health , psychology , developmental psychology , developmental disorder , psychiatry , medicine , clinical psychology , autism
Abstract Background Raising a child with a disability places considerable demands and stress on parents, which can contribute to mental health difficulties. Research has primarily focused on mothers' mental health, and our understanding of the effects on fathers remains limited. The factors that place fathers at increased risk of mental health difficulties are also poorly understood. This study aimed to redress these gaps by reporting on the mental health of a large sample of fathers of children with an intellectual disability ( ID ) (aged 3–15 years), comparing this to published A ustralian norms and mothers of children with ID . The second aim of the study was to explore risk factors associated with fathers' mental health. Method The data for this study come from 315 Australian fathers of children (aged 3–15 years) with ID , who participated in the large‐scale evaluation of the Signposts for building better behaviour programme . Fathers completed a range of self‐report questionnaires at baseline including the D epression A nxiety S tress S cale ( DASS ).Results Fathers in the present sample reported significantly more symptoms of depression and stress than the Australian normative data, with approximately 6–8% reporting symptoms in the severe to extremely severe range. The strongest predictors of fathers' mental health difficulties were children's behaviour problems, daily stress arising from fathers' own needs and children's care needs, and low parenting satisfaction. Socio‐economic factors did not predict mental health difficulties. Conclusion This study is among one of the first to report the mental health of fathers of children with a disability in A ustralia. Findings highlight that some fathers of children with ID are at heightened risk of experiencing mental health difficulties, underscoring the importance of the provision of information and interventions to promote their mental health.

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