Parents' psychosocial problems influencing the continuity of early intervention treatment in children with developmental delay.

2000 
Developmental delay is a chronic disorder, which has a significant and continuing impact on the developmental progress of children. Whether the developmentally delayed children have continuous early intervention treatment is important for the success of early intervention. Professionals in early intervention services have been encouraged to understand parents' psychosocial problems and to further enhance their understanding of care for their delayed children. The purposes of this study were two-fold. The first was to identify the parents' psychosocial problems. The second purpose was to find parents' psychosocial variables that could he used to significantly discriminate-whether the retarded children have continuously received treatment programs. A questionnaire to investigate parents' psychosocial problems was implemented. It mainly consisted of twenty descriptive items concerning parents' psychosocial conditions. Parents used a four-point Likert scale to rate the likelihood of the items. Parents also responded as to whether their child had received treatments continuously. Subjects were the parents of children who were diagnosed to have developmental delay. Factor analysis and discriminant analysis was used for statistical data examination. Analyzed data were from 207 completely finished questionnaires. Six parents' psychosocial factors were extracted via factor analysis, and they accounted for 46.9% of the variance of the twenty items. The factors were identified as family income, family members' relationships, caring skills, supporting resources, acceptance of the retarded child, and self-psychological adaptation. About half of the children had received treatment continuously. Discriminant analysis revealed that family income was crucial to parents' capacity to meet the needs for treatment.
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