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About Resilience: Three Lessons Learned from Families

About Resilience: Three Lessons Learned from Families. Laraine M. Glidden, Ph.D. Distinguished Professor of Psychology and Human Development St. Mary’s College of Maryland lmglidden@smcm.edu Arc 2008 Convention Albuquerque, New Mexico, November 7, 2008. Acknowledgments.

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About Resilience: Three Lessons Learned from Families

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  1. About Resilience: Three Lessons Learned from Families Laraine M. Glidden, Ph.D. Distinguished Professor of Psychology and Human Development St. Mary’s College of Maryland lmglidden@smcm.edu Arc 2008 Convention Albuquerque, New Mexico, November 7, 2008

  2. Acknowledgments • 249 families who participated • Grant No. 21993 from the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development • Many agencies, including the Arc, who helped identify and recruit participants • My home institution and dozens of students who have assisted this research over its 25 years

  3. Background • Historical pathological view DemandsStress/Crisis • Focus on negative evolved into an examination of what factors were associated with positive adaptation

  4. Guiding Framework Existential Issues • Mediating Variables • Commitment to the child • Preparation for the child • Child characteristics relative to parent preferences • Parent’s personal attributes • Family strength • Social support Child with disability enters the family Adjustment, Adaptation, Coping Reality Issues

  5. Unique Methodology • Adoptive-birth comparison • If birth families have outcomes similar to those of families who have knowingly adopted children with IDD, then we can conclude that they are effectively coping with the reality demands

  6. Project Parenting Timeline • Time 1 • Retrospective • Diagnosis/ • Child entry • report • Time 2 • Personal • Interview • Self-report • questionnaires • Time 3 • Mail or Telephone Follow-Up • Self- and other-report • Time 4 • Transition to • Adulthood • Self-report • questionnaires • Behavioral • Observations

  7. Sample Characteristics

  8. Child Diagnoses Diagnosis % Down Syndrome 37% Cerebral Palsy 15% Developmental Delay Unknown 9% Brain Damage 3% Epilepsy 4% Other Chromosomal/Genetic 7% Fetal Alcohol Syndrome 3% Other 22%

  9. Lesson 1 • Resilience may be extraordinary, but it is not unusual

  10. Depression at Time 1 For Adoptive and Birth Mothers Depression Score

  11. Depression at Times 1-4 For Adoptive and Birth Mothers Depression Score

  12. Lesson 2 • Rewards and satisfactions outweigh troubles and worries > >

  13. Subjective Well-Being (SWB) Three questions: Global, current, and with respect to the child • Global: How do you feel about your life as a whole? • Current: How do you feel about how things are going right now? • Child:How do you feel about how things are going with (child’s name)? Lower scores = greater SWB

  14. Subjective Well-being Subjective Well-being

  15. Outcome Variable: Transition Daily Rewards and Worries • Self-report inventory assesses the positive and negative aspects of a child’s transition into adult life from the parent’s point of view. 28 items divide into five factors: Positive Future Orientation (PFO) Community Resources (CR) Financial Independence (FI) Family Relations (FR) Family Relations with Siblings (FR w/Sibs)

  16. TDRWQ Sample Items 1. PFO:I am excited by the prospects for my child’s future. 2. CR: I am pleased that _____ has adequate transportation. 3. FI:I worry that ____’s income will be inadequate. (R) 4. FR:I am sad that my child is missing out on important family interactions. (R) 5. FR w/Sibs:I am glad that my children look out for one another.

  17. Transition Daily Rewards and Worries

  18. Lesson 3 • Confrontive coping predicts positive well-being • Assertive efforts to alter the situation • May involve hostility and risk-taking

  19. Confrontive Coping—Sample Items • Stood my ground and fought for what I wanted • Tried to get the person responsible to change his or her mind • I expressed anger to the person who caused the problem

  20. When Children are 12 • High levels of Confrontive Coping are related to low depression for mothers

  21. When Children are 18 • High levels of Confrontive Coping predict: • Better SWB-Child • Higher rewards for Family Relations

  22. Conclusions • Resilience is an ordinary and typical response to an extraordinary situation • A positive psychology approach whereby we expect and measure positive outcomes is a necessary and appropriate framework for studying families

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