Social Skills and Medical Responsibility Across Development in Youth With Spina Bifida

Author:

Stiles-Shields Colleen1ORCID,Shirkey Kezia C2,Winning Adrien M3,Smith Zoe R3,Wartman Elicia3,Holmbeck Grayson N3

Affiliation:

1. Section of Community Behavioral Health, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Rush University Medical Center

2. Psychology Department, North Park University

3. Psychology Department, Loyola University Chicago

Abstract

Abstract Objective  To examine the predictive role of social skills in youth with spina bifida (SB) on growth in medical responsibility across development. Methods  As part of a larger, longitudinal study, 140 youth with SB were assessed across four time points (ages 8–22 across time points). Mixed-effects models were investigated for change with: (a) no predictors (i.e., change in medical responsibility across age; time was examined using the participant’s age, centered at 11.5 years); (b) social variables (i.e., observed social behaviors, parent- and teacher-reported social skills) as predictors; and (c) social variables as predictors with intelligence quotient, lesion level, and sex as covariates. Results  Significant growth with age was identified for medical responsibility (p < .0001). Observed, parent-reported, and teacher-reported social skills did not significantly predict this growth; however, all three predicted the intercept for medical responsibility at 11.5 years of age (ps ≤ .047). Parent-reported social skills remained a significant predictor of the intercept at 11.5 years of age when including the covariates (p = .008). Conclusions  Children with SB who exhibited more positive social skills were more likely to a have higher level of medical responsibility in late childhood, but higher levels of social skills were not associated with a more rapid increase in responsibility over time. Identifying existing social strengths and promoting the practice of prosocial skills may have additional benefits to children with SB, including their acquisition of medical responsibility.

Funder

National Institute of Nursing Research

Office of Behavioral and Social Sciences Research

National Institute of Child Health and Human Development

March of Dimes Birth Defects Foundation

Cohn Family Foundation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Developmental and Educational Psychology,Pediatrics, Perinatology, and Child Health

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