Mental Health Dynamics between Mothers and Siblings of Children with Disabilities
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/36061Dato
2024-12-24Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Forfatter
Zahl, Erica; Cogo Moreira, Hugo; Fredriksen, Trude; Kirchhofer, Solveig Melanie; Orm, Stian; Vatne, Torun Marie; Botta, Matteo; Fjermestad, Krister WestlyeSammendrag
Methods: We utilized baseline and 12month follow-up data from a randomized controlled trial of a brief intervention designed to enhance parent-sibling communication in families of children with a disability. The sample comprised 214 siblings aged 8-16 years and their parents (N = 203 mothers, N = 124 fathers).We estimated bivariate latent change score models to examine the longitudinal cross-domain associations between changes in parental mental health and changes in sibling mental health, and changes in parental mental health and sibling adjustment.
Results: The results showed that changes in maternal mental health and sibling adjustment over the 12-month period were correlated (r = .22). The cross-domain associations between changes in maternal mental health and sibling mental health and adjustment were not statistically significant in any of the two models. However, baseline sibling mental health had nearly doubled impact on changes in maternal mental health (Β = 0.232, p = 0.061) compared to maternal health's impact on sibling mental health (Β = -0.134, p = 0.289). Models with paternal mental health data unfortunately did not run due to low paternal response rate at 12-months.
Discussion: The findings suggest that whereas maternal mental health and sibling adjustment changes are correlated over time, the relationship between maternal and sibling measures does not necessarily operate bidirectionally. Future studies on family mental health dynamics should include data from fathers that may contribute to a broader understanding of these complex relationships.