Family Planning and Family Vision in Mothers After Diagnosis of a Child With Autism Spectrum Disorder

Authors
Navot, N. Jorgenson, A. G. Stoep, A. V. Toth, K. Webb, S. J.
Publication year
2016
Citation Title
Family planning and family vision in mothers after diagnosis of a child with autism spectrum disorder
Journal Name
Autism
Journal Volume
20
Issue Number
5
Page Numbers
605-615
DOI
10.1177/1362361315602134
Summary
A child being diagnosed with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) can involve a lot of changes to family planning for parents. Mothers of first-born children diagnosed with ASD were interviewed about their experiences regarding initial family planning, adapting to their child’s diagnosis, and family planning following the diagnosis. Important factors to adapting and planning following an ASD diagnosis include coherence of the initial plan, planning flexibility, and feelings of support and competence.
Key Findings
Mothers who adapted well to their child’s diagnosis tended to focus on the present and positive moments, feel competent about their parenting, and feel supported by others.
Mothers who adapted poorly to their child’s diagnosis tended to focus on guilt or blame, feel fear and confusion about the future, and feel isolated from others.
Mothers who decided to have additional children, compared to those who did not, adapted more positively to their child’s diagnosis, had more flexible views of family planning, and had more coherent ideas about how their family of origin impacted their planning and values.
Implications for Military Professionals
Develop online information and resources for military families with a child diagnosed with ASD
Collaborate with military parenting programs to make community counseling focused on family planning available to military families
Implications for Program Leaders
Offer military parents classes about how to parent children with developmental disabilities in order to increase self-efficacy in regards to parenting their child with ASD
Provide support groups for military parents of children with ASD to share experiences and meet others with similar struggles
Implications for Policy Makers
Recommend education for professionals who work with military families regarding how to best support families who have a child with ASD
Support programs that teach military parents about available resources for children with developmental disabilities and how to advocate for those resources
Methods
Biological mothers who were primary caregivers to a first-born child diagnosed with ASD two to five years previously were recruited via mailed letters with a 41% response rate.
Mothers were interviewed regarding their experience of their child being diagnosed with ASD, original family plan, process of adaptation to the diagnosis, and future family planning process.
Mothers’ descriptions of their experiences were coded for themes and key concepts.
Participants
Participants included 22 mothers of children 48-84 months of age diagnosed with ASD.
All mothers in the sample had initially planned to have two or more children.
All mothers had some education after high school, most lived with the first-born child’s father (82%), and some reported identifying as a minority race/ethnicity (36%).
At the time of the interview, mothers either had only the child with ASD (32%), one additional child (59%), or an additional set of twins (10%); no other demographic data were provided.
Limitations
Interviews were retrospective, potentially biasing mothers’ reported experiences.
Only mothers were included, and results may not generalize to fathers of children with ASD.
Because mothers who did or did not decide to have additional children were not compared statistically, researchers’ subjectivity may have influenced results of the comparison.
Avenues for Future Research
Statistically compare adjustment and well-being of a larger sample of parents who do and do not decide to have additional children after having a child diagnosed with ASD
Examine differences in family planning processes when the number of children initially desired and the birth order of the child diagnosed with ASD varies
Investigate the changes in adjustment and family planning of mothers and fathers across time after having a child diagnosed with ASD
Design Rating
2 Stars - There are some flaws in the study design or research sample, but those flaws do not significantly threaten the ability to make conclusions based on the data.
Methods Rating
1 Star - There are biases or significant deficits in the way the variables in the study are defined and measured or the analyses indirectly lead to the conclusions of the study.
Limitations Rating
1 Star - There are several factors that limit the ability to extend the results to a population and therefore the results can only be extended to a very specific subset of the population.
Focus
Civilian
Target Population
Population Focus
Abstract
The diagnosis of a child with autism has short- and long-term impacts on family functioning. With early diagnosis, the diagnostic process is likely to co-occur with family planning decisions, yet little is known about how parents navigate this process. This study explores family planning decision making process among mothers of young children with autism spectrum disorder in the United States, by understanding the transformation in family vision before and after the diagnosis. A total of 22 mothers of first born children, diagnosed with autism between 2 and 4 years of age, were interviewed about family vision prior to and after their child’s diagnosis. Grounded Theory method was used for data analysis. Findings indicated that coherence of early family vision, maternal cognitive flexibility, and maternal responses to diagnosis were highly influential in future family planning decisions. The decision to have additional children reflected a high level of adaptability built upon a solid internalized family model and a flexible approach to life. Decision to stop
childrearing reflected a relatively less coherent family model and more rigid cognitive style followed by ongoing hardship managing life after the diagnosis. This report may be useful for health-care providers in enhancing therapeutic alliance and guiding family planning counseling.
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