2005
DOI: 10.1093/jpepsy/jsi076
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Pediatric Parenting Stress Among Parents of Children with Type 1 Diabetes: The Role of Self-Efficacy, Responsibility, and Fear

Abstract: Each area of parent functioning associated with pediatric parenting stress is amenable to behavioral intervention aimed at stress reduction or control and improvement of parent psychological and child-health outcomes.

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Cited by 294 publications
(358 citation statements)
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“…Although this study does not examine differences in one-versus two-parent households, there is evidence in the diabetes literature that family and parenting stress is higher among single parents. 27,28 Higher stress is a potential impediment to parents' ability to learn illness management skills for their children. 27 Of interest, the two questions regarding the indefinite storage of DNA were less likely to be answered correctly by parents in households where both the mother and the father participated in decision making.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Although this study does not examine differences in one-versus two-parent households, there is evidence in the diabetes literature that family and parenting stress is higher among single parents. 27,28 Higher stress is a potential impediment to parents' ability to learn illness management skills for their children. 27 Of interest, the two questions regarding the indefinite storage of DNA were less likely to be answered correctly by parents in households where both the mother and the father participated in decision making.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…27,28 Higher stress is a potential impediment to parents' ability to learn illness management skills for their children. 27 Of interest, the two questions regarding the indefinite storage of DNA were less likely to be answered correctly by parents in households where both the mother and the father participated in decision making. We hypothesize that participants related the questions about indefinite storage of samples (A9 and A12) to the question regarding the use of leftover samples by other researchers (A4) and responded similarly to these items.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Available research, however, suggests that child behaviour difficulties (Heller, 1993), parenting stress related to caring for a child with a chronic illness (Streisand et al, 2005) and socioeconomic status (Grus et al, 2001) may all influence parents' self-efficacy for managing their child's chronic health condition. Self-efficacy in turn has been associated with variations in parents' performance of disease management tasks, such as asthma management behaviours (e.g.…”
Section: Page 7 Of 42mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The Pediatric Inventory for Parents (PIP) [23] was designed to examine areas of stress and concern in parents of children with a medical illness. It has been proven a reliable instrument for examining parent's report of stress related to caring for a child with a serious illness, such as cancer [22,23], diabetes [34] and sickle cell disease [35]. One of the assets of the PIP is that parents are asked to rate both the frequency of stressful illness-related events and the difficulty they experience with these events.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%