Prediction of parental posttraumatic stress, anxiety and depression after a child's critical hospitalization
Loading...
Identifiers
Publication date
Authors
Advisors
Editors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Abstract
OBJECTIVE:
To study the role of parental resilience, emotions accessed during admission and perceived stress in predicting the degree of parental posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), anxiety and depression symptoms after a child's treatment in intensive care.
METHODS:
This was prospective longitudinal cohort study. A total of 196 parents of pediatric intensive care survivors completed questionnaires assessing resilience, perceived stress, emotions experienced during admission, 48h post-discharge (T0). Sociodemographic and medical data were also collected. Main outcomes were anxiety, depression and PTSD, three (T1) and six (T2) months later.
RESULTS:
At T2, 23% of parents reported clinically significant levels of symptoms of PTSD, 21% reported moderate-severe anxiety, and 9% reported moderate-severe depression. These rates were not statistically different to rates at T1. Path analyses indicated that 47% of the variance in psychopathology symptoms at T2 could be predicted from the variables assessed at T0. Resilience was a strong negative predictor of psychopathology symptoms, but this effect was mostly indirect, mediated by the stress that parents perceive during their child's critical hospitalization.
CONCLUSIONS:
Mobilizing coping in order to maintain resilience and to decrease their perceived stress levels could improve parents' mental health outcomes following their child's intensive care treatment.
Description
UNESCO Subjects
Keywords
Bibliographic reference
Rodríguez-Rey, R., Alonso-Tapia, J., & Colville, G. (2018). Prediction of parental posttraumatic stress, anxiety and depression after a child's critical hospitalization. Journal of Critical Care, 45, 149-155. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jcrc.2018.02.006








