“…Indeed, the challenges of caring for a child with a DD, which include financial hardship (Kogan et al, 2008), social isolation (Yantzi, Rosenberg, & McKeever, 2006), negotiating a fragmented service system (Griffith & Hastings, 2013), stigma and social judgement (Cantwell, Muldoon, & Gallagher, in press), far outstrip those of parenting a neuro-typical child. That caregivers of children with a DD experience increased psychological distress has been widely evidenced, with studies reporting on higher levels of psychological symptoms such as perceived stress (Cantwell, Muldoon, & Gallagher, 2014), hopelessness (Bandeira et al, 2010), anxiety (Ruiz-Robledillo & MoyaAlbiol, 2013) and depression (Cantwell et al, in press;Smith & Grzywacz, 2014). In addition, compared with parents of neuro-typical children, caregivers' levels of anxiety and depression were found to be more likely to satisfy criterion for clinical mood disorder (Gallagher, Phillips, Oliver, & Carroll, 2008).…”