Exploring Family Adjustment Among Parents of a Child With a Disability Attending Relationship Education

Author:

Wheeler Naomi J.1ORCID,Allen Lindsay2,Man Jiale3,Pointer Ashley1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Counseling and Special Education, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, VA, USA

2. Department of Counselor Education, Palm Beach Atlantic University, West Palm Beach, Florida, USA

3. Clinical Mental Health Counseling, Seattle University, Seattle, WA, USA

Abstract

Objective: The current exploratory study examined dyadic changes in family adjustment (i.e., parental stress, positive coping, family-based support, social support) reported by parents of a child with a disability after 12-hours of relationship education (RE). Background: Parents of a child with a disability encounter social barriers that contribute to parental stress and inhibit family well-being. RE reduced psychological and relationship distress in community samples—yet, ability status and the influence on a family's presenting needs/resources are overlooked in previous research. Methods: We extracted a subset of data to examine pre- and post-reports of family adjustment among couples parenting a child with a disability who completed the PREP curriculum. We used structural equation modeling to examine an actor–partner interdependence model for the dyadic association of mean-centered baseline subscale measures of family adjustment and residual change scores for men and women in a relationship post-RE intervention. Results: Actor effects were significant and predicted the amount of residual change for men and women. Significant partner effects existed for male social support and male and female family-based support. Conclusion: Results expand our understanding of RE effectiveness with an understudied subset of parents, those raising a child with a disability. Parents reported improvements in family adjustment and partners influenced one another in terms of family adjustment changes. Implications: Supportive parent programming, such as RE, may be an important consideration for families that include a child with a disability to address the social barriers that tax existing parent and family resources.

Funder

Department of Health and Human Services, Administration for Children and Families, Office of Family Assistance

Publisher

SAGE Publications

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