1. Severe Childhood Autism: The Family Lived Experience.
- Author
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Bessette Gorlin J, McAlpine CP, Garwick A, and Wieling E
- Subjects
- Adaptation, Psychological, Adult, Autistic Disorder therapy, Child, Child Rearing psychology, Female, Humans, Male, Socioeconomic Factors, Autistic Disorder psychology, Parent-Child Relations, Parenting psychology, Parents psychology, Severity of Illness Index
- Abstract
This research examined the experiences of families living with a child with severe autism. There is limited literature on the experiences of families when a child has severe autism as distinct from milder autism and includes the voices of multiple family members. Van Manen's phenomenological approach was used for data collection and analysis. This approach allowed for the use of innovative data sources, including unstructured individual and family interviews, observations, and family lifelines (a pictorial, temporal picture with comments of the families lives). This study included 29 interviews with 22 participants from 11 families. All data were creatively triangulated and interpreted. Six essential themes were identified. First, families experienced autism as mysterious and complex because it is an invisible and unpredictable condition with diagnostic challenges. Second, families described severe autism behaviors that often caused self-injury, harm to others and damaged homes. Third, profound communication deficits resulted in isolation between the family and child. Fourth, families discussed the unrelenting stress from lack of sleep, managing the child's developmental delays, coordinating and financing services, and concern for the child's future. Fifth, families described consequences of isolation from friends, school, the public, and health providers. Sixth, families portrayed their need for compassionate support and formed 'hybrid families' (nuclear, extended families and friends) to gain support. Study results can be utilized to educate nurses/other providers about the unique needs of families with children with severe autism and could influence health care policies to improve the care for families caring for children with severe autism., (Copyright © 2016 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2016
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