The roles of self-compassion and social support on the maternal adjustment to a child’s hip dysplasia

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Abstract

Parenthood can be challenging when facing a child’s chronic illness such as developmental dysplasia of the hip (DDH). Although social support is known as a protective factor for the caregiver’s mental health, the role of self-compassion is less explored. This study, conducted in Portugal, explored whether self-compassion and social support mediate the relationship between mothers’ psychological adjustment and perception of their child’s illness. Ninety-four mothers of children with DDH completed questionnaires on illness perception, self-compassion, perceived social support, and psychological distress. Results suggested that self-compassion and social support mediated the relationship between mothers’ overall negative perception of the children’s illness and psychological distress. The final model accounted for 50% of the variance of depressive symptoms, 40% of anxiety, and 63% of perceived stress. This study highlights the potential value of encouraging mothers to seek social support when facing their child’s DDH diagnosis. Promoting self-compassion may be important in clinical intervention.

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Chronic illness in children, Hip dysplasia, Maternal adjustment, Self-compassion, Social support

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Journal article

Citation

Veloso, B., Palmeira, L., Carvalhais, L., Marta-Simões, J., & Trindade, I. A. (2024). The roles of self-compassion and social support on the maternal adjustment to a child’s hip dysplasia. Journal of Health Psychology, (published online: 21 November 2024), 1-11. https://doi.org/10.1177/13591053241295892. Repositório Institucional UPT.https://hdl.handle.net/11328/6014

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