Adolescent Coping and Family Functioning in the Family of a Child with Autism
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Abstract
Autism is on the rise at an alarming rate. Autism impacts all members of a family
including siblings. There is much research that examines the etiology of autism but there
is little research that explores, from the sibling perspective, what it is like to have a
sibling with autism. There are studies that examine coping and the perception of family
functioning from the parent perspective, but there are few studies that examine coping
and perception of family functioning from the adolescent perspective. The Resiliency
Model of Family Stress, Adjustment, and Adaptation (McCubbin & McCubbin, 1993)
guided this exploratory, correlational study. The purpose of this study was to examine the
coping strategies used by adolescent siblings of children with autism and to examine how
these coping strategies influence their perception of family functioning. Qualitative data
were collected to help inform the quantitative results. Adolescents 11-21 years of age
were recruited through the Interactive Autism Network and completed the measures
online via Survey Monkey. The most commonly used coping strategy, as measured by ACOPE,
for adolescents in this study was seeking diversion. Females more frequently than
males used the coping strategies developing social support, investing in close friends, and
relaxing. The younger adolescents used an increased number of and more varied coping
strategies than older adolescents. The adolescents perceived that their families functioned
in the unhealthy range on five of the seven subscales on the Family Assessment Device
with no statistically significant differences between males and females or between age
groups on perception of family functioning. Path analysis using multiple regression
revealed significant negative relationships between coping strategies, self-concept,
satisfaction with the sibling relationship, and family functioning and explained 44.2% of
the variance in the proposed model. The results of this study provide a better
understanding of the complexities that adolescents who have siblings with autism
encounter. Further research is needed to explore additional factors that influence family
functioning including examining family functioning with adolescents with typically
developing siblings. The development of coping strategies in children and adolescents
also needs further exploration.Ph.D.NursingUniversity of Michigan, Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studieshttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/64809/1/sjvliem_1.pd