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Poster Session Presented at AFP 2005 Beach Center on Disability University of Kansas www.beachcenter.org Denise Poston and Nina Zuna With assistance from Kandace Fleming, George Gotto, Janet Marquis, and Jean Ann Summers.
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Poster Session Presented at AFP 2005 Beach Center on Disability University of Kansas www.beachcenter.org Denise Poston and Nina Zuna With assistance from Kandace Fleming, George Gotto, Janet Marquis, and Jean Ann Summers Family Community ParticipationThe Results of a New Survey and Implications for Practice
What We Know About Families’ Ability to Participate in Their Community • Families of children with disabilities feel isolated. • Communities provide supports, services, social connections, a sense of belonging, recreation, employment, and education. • However, many families of children with disabilities can’t access all their community has to offer due to the barriers they face. • But, we don’t know what exactly the barriers are and what families want to do, but can’t.
Research Questions • Survey development as part of a larger research program – what are the impact of policies on families? • How satisfied are families with their ability to participate in community activities? • What challenges do families experience? • What are the relationships between activities, barriers, and overall community participation? • What are the relationships between family community participation and family quality of life?
Developing the Survey • Literature review – participation, integration, isolation • Literature on the ability of people with disabilities to access community services • Conceptualizing family community participation • Activities • Barriers • Overall community participation • Sense of belonging • Focus groups with families • Initial survey with telephone interviews – revised survey
332 families of children with disabilities • Recruited from 11 DD agencies and 34 schools in 8 states (CA, HI, IN, LA, NM, TX, VA), and an information fair for families in CO • The families • 91% female • 53% employed full or part time • 53% earned <25k, 30% 25-60k, 17% 60k • 62% non-white • The children • Autism – 23% • Mental retardation – 23% • Developmental delay – 9% Sample
Family Community Activities (FCA) • Families rated their satisfaction with their ability to participate in community activities • Activities included recreation, leisure, employment, social, spiritual • 3-point scale; tied directly to child’s disability “We can’t do this as much as we want because of our child’s disability” 1= Dissatisfied; 2 = Somewhat satisfied; 3 = Very satisfied
Family Community Activities (CFA) • Movies • Going out to eat • Religious activities • Watching sporting events • Parks • Swimming pool • Shopping • Getting together with family and friends • Quiet, indoor things (museums) • Active, outdoor things (camping) • Working outside the home • Joining hobby club or class
Family Community Activities (FCA) • Overall results • Mean = 2.36 • Standard Deviation = .487 • Generally, satisfaction with participation in community activities was slightly above somewhat satisfied. • Generally, families are more satisfied with their participation in outdoor, active, less structured activities than indoor, quiet, structured activities 1 = Dissatisfied; 2 = Somewhat satisfied; 3 = Very satisfied.
Challenges to Community Participation (CCP) • Families rate the extent to which statements are a problem for their family in that it prevents them from participating in their community • Problems are related to the child’s disability, family resources, community acceptance, and accessibility • 3-point scale 1= Not much; 2 = Somewhat; 3 = Big problem
Challenges to Community Participation (CCP) • Unfriendly people • Physical accessibility • Child’s behavior • Noisy or crowded environment • Transportation • Too busy caring for child • Community too small • Community not safe • No childcare for children without disabilities • No special childcare or respite for child with disability • People don’t speak our language • Not enough money • **Child’s health • **Not adequate cognitive accommodations for my child
Challenges to Community Participation (CCP) • Overall results • Mean = 1.60 • Standard deviation = .42 • Generally, families rated challenges as slightly below “Somewhat of a problem.” 1 = Not much; 2 = Somewhat; 3= A big problem • Lack of money, child’s behavior, and overly stimulating environment were biggest problems
Overall Community Satisfaction • How satisfied are families • that their community makes them feel that they belong? • Mean = 3.53 • Standard deviation = 1.16 • with their level of participation in their community? • Mean = 3.48 • Standard deviation = 1.12 Scale: On a continuum from 1= Very Dissatisfied to 5 = Very Satisfied
Relationships (Correlations) • The lower the scores on challenges (CCP) (least problematic), the higher the scores on activities (FCA) (the more satisfied families were with their ability to participate in specific activities). (r = -.345) • The lower the scores on challenges, the higher the scores on overall satisfaction with belonging in the community. (r = -.432) • The lower the scores on challenges, the higher the scores on overall satisfaction with their ability to participate in the community. (r = -.413)
Relationships with FQOL • The lower the scores on challenges (CCP), the higher the scores on family quality of life domains. • Family Interaction r = -.265 • Parenting r = -.227 • Emotional Well-being r = -.376 • Physical / Material Well-being r = -.422 • Disability-Related Support r = -.390
Group Differences - Employment • 2 groups - employed - unemployed • No significant differences were found for employment status on activities (FCA) • Mean = 2.4, 2.3, respectively • F(1,275) = .149 • p = .699 • There was a significant difference in mean scores for employment status on challenges (CCP) • Mean = 1.6, 1.7, respectively • F(1,305) = 4.34 • p < .05 • 2=.014 (small effect size)
Disability Levels • 3 levels - Mild/unknown – moderate – severe/very severe • There are differences among the disability levels • The omnibus ANOVA was significant for group differences on FCA for three disability levels • Mean = 2.5, 2.4, 2.2 respectively • F(2,267) = 6.47 • p <.01 • 2=.047 (Small-medium effect size) • The omnibus ANOVA was not significant for group differences on CCP for three disability levels • Mean = 1.7, 1.6, 1.6 respectively • F(2, 299) = 1.78 • p = .17
Disability Types • 3 types - Emotional/Behavioral – Cognitive – Physical / Sensory • There are differences among the disability types • The omnibus ANOVA was significant for group differences on FCA for three disability types • Mean = 2.2, 2.5, 2.3 respectively • F(2,230) = 11.21 • p <.001 • 2=.09 (Medium effect size) • The omnibus ANOVA was significant for group differences on CCP for three disability types • Mean = 1.7, 1.5, 1.6 respectively • F(2,255) = 4.01 • p <.05 • 2=.031 (Small effect size)
Family Education Level • 7 Levels – ranging from no HS graduation to graduate degree • There are differences among the education levels related to challenges– generally more challenges are associated with less education • The omnibus ANOVA was not significant for group differences on FCA for 7 education levels • F(6,272) = .975 • p = .443 • The omnibus ANOVA was significant for group differences on CCP for 7 education levels • F(6,303) = 3.31 • p <.01 • 2=.063 (Medium effect size)
Family Income Level • 3 levels – <25k – 25-60k - > 60k • There are differences among the income levels related to activities • The omnibus ANOVA was significant for group differences on FCA for 3 income levels • Mean = 2.3, 2.5, 2.2 respectively • F(2,261) = 6.30 • p <.01 • 2=.047 (Small-medium effect size) • The omnibus ANOVA was not significant for group differences on CCP for 3 income levels • Mean = 1.6, 1.6, 1.6 respectively • F(2,293) = .727 • p = .484
Applications for the Family Community Integration Survey • Planning supports for individual families • Evaluating agencies or programs • Community needs assessment • Conducting research • How could you use the FCI survey and other Beach Center tools in your agency? • Just ask us! E-mail denisep@ku.edu
Implications for Practice • Consider how IFSP/IEP goals might support a family’s ability to participate in their community. • How can you be a “door opener” for a family of a child with a disability? • Can you provide training to community organizations on how to integrate children with disabilities and their families?
Next Steps in this Line of Research • Asking more detailed questions • Which community integration factors best predict a high family quality of life? • Are some families more likely to be more integrated than others? • Are some communities more likely to be more “welcoming” than others? • What types of policies, services, and supports facilitate integration of both individuals and families? • Based on the answers to these questions, building a data base of “what works” in terms of integrating families of children with disabilities in our communities is a future goal.