Anxiety/stress among Mothers Living with HIV: Effects on Parenting Skills & Child Outcomes.
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Transcript of Anxiety/stress among Mothers Living with HIV: Effects on Parenting Skills & Child Outcomes.
Anxiety/stress among Mothers Living with HIV:
Effects on Parenting Skills & Child Outcomes
Debra A. Murphy, Ph.D.
Director, Health Risk Reduction ProjectsDepartment of Psychiatry
University of California at Los Angeles
Will briefly discuss two studies today
PACT
TRACK
Parents And children Coping Together (PACT) 1997 - 2002
Parents and Adolescents Coping Together (PACT II) 2002 - 2007
Parents and Adolescents Coping Together (PACT III) 2008 – 2013
First cohort of children affected by maternal HIV/AIDS followed from early school age to late adolescence/early
adulthood
PACT Sample
• 135 mother/child dyads (N = 270)
• Mothers HIV symptomatic or AIDS dx
• Well children, 5 - 11 years
(1 child per household)
Mother M age = 34.7 (SD = 6.21)
African American30%
Latina55%
White (Not Latina)6%
Native American/Alaskan Native
3%Mixed/Other6%
Child M age = 8.47 (SD = 1.85); 47% Female
• The majority of MLH were on antiretroviral
therapy & had very poor adherence
Factors Associated with Decreased Adherence
–Stress p
< .05
–Having a Partner p
< .001
–Age of youngest child (trend) p
< .10
Adherence & Stress
• Disclosure to children is one of the main concerns of mothers
• Nondisclosure can impact the mom’s physical and psychological functioning – skip medications– more likely to miss medical appointments– greater levels of depression
Disclosure & Stress
Family Routines & Stress
• Parenting skills may play an especially important role in families with a chronically ill parent.
• Longitudinal study (average child age at start was 8 years of age; at end was 13.8)
• Maternal health associated with family routines across time–huge impact of family routines on child
outcomes
• Issue of stability of parental skill
Projected Trajectories for Low & High Stability of Family Routines x Age
The trajectory for those where family routines are highly unstable exhibitIncreasing conduct disorder behavior over time.
QUESTIONS
All of the factors discussed so far that cause stress to the mothers have an impact on child outcomes (such as mothers not being able to implement consistent family routines).
Mothers are aware of the fact that children are being impacted—this is clear from the following quotes:
Quotes from Mothers
“You feel useless. You cannot cook for your kids, take care of them, take them out . . . It was very frustrating. I felt bad.”
“Many times he wanted me to take him to the park and I was . . . suffering from the side effects of the medicine. He got frustrated, angry . . . he really wanted more attention.”
“When they hospitalized me for three months straight, I wasn’t there for him and I couldn’t—3 months seemed like not a long time, but it is for his age . . . He wanted momma and I couldn’t be there.”
“When I knew there was something going on, I didn’t take the medicine . . . holidays, school events . . . things like that. I don’t take the medicine because if I take [it], I’m going to be sleepy, I’m going to have diarrhea, I’m going to be nauseated, dizzy, can’t drive, pain in my legs, all that.”
“One day he came home from school and told me, ‘Mommy, I am going to tell you something . . . Sometimes I am at school and I am thinking about the hospital and what is happening to you . . . That is happening to me a lot’.”
QUESTIONS
Teaching, Raising, And Communicating with Kids (TRACK)
Study to investigate maternal stress among mothers living with HIV
Background
• Parenting stress has been defined as the difficulty that arises from the demands of being a parent.
• High levels of anxiety & stress have been associated with negative parenting practices.
Mother M age = 37.5 (SD = 7.3)
African American15.9%
Latina81.2%
White1.4%
Other1.4%
Sample Characteristics: 69 MLH
HIV Health-Related
AnxietyAnxiety
Parenting Stress
Parental Anxiety/Stress
Aggression Delinquency Anxiety
Child Problem
Behaviors
Parenting
Skills
Family Routines
Parent/Child Communication
Parent Discipline
-0.96** -0.73**
• Maternal anxiety/stress had a direct association with parenting skills. Those who were more stressed:
• Had less consistent discipline
• Had poorer parent-child communication
• Engaged in less frequent family routines
• Parenting skills had a direct negative association with child outcomes.
• Parenting interventions need to provide mother with information:
• How their distress can affect the child
• Strategies & support for dealing with distress
• Strategies to implement parenting skills
QUESTIONS