BACKGROUND: Parental early adjustment to a prenatal or postnatal diagnosis of congenital anomaly has been studied mainly within a pathological and deterministic perspective, giving us an inadequate view of the impact of the diagnosis. OBJECTIVES: Adopting a comprehensive approach on parental adjustment, we aimed to characterise the impact of the diagnosis on psychological distress and quality of life, in the early postdiagnosis stage. The effects of gender and the timing of the diagnosis were also examined. METHODS: In this cross-sectional study, 42 couples with healthy infants and 42 couples whose infants were prenatal or postnatally diagnosed with a congenital anomaly responded to the Brief Symptom Inventory-18 and to the World Health Organization Quality of Life-Brief instrument. RESULTS: In the early postdiagnosis stage, parents whose infants were diagnosed with a congenital anomaly presented higher levels of psychological distress than did the parents of healthy infants (F(2,79) = 6.23, p = .003), although they displayed similar levels of quality of life (F(4,78) = 0.62, p = .647). Mothers reported more adjustment difficulties than fathers in both groups. Receiving the diagnosis in the prenatal period was associated with higher maternal psychological quality of life (Z = -2.00, p = .045). CONCLUSION: The occurrence of a diagnosis of congenital anomaly during the transition to parenthood adds to an accumulation of stress-inducing events and manifests itself in psychopathological symptoms. Maintaining a positive evaluation of well-being may be understood as a parental resource to deal with the diagnosis. The importance of adopting a comprehensive perspective on parental adjustment is highlighted.
BACKGROUND: Parental early adjustment to a prenatal or postnatal diagnosis of congenital anomaly has been studied mainly within a pathological and deterministic perspective, giving us an inadequate view of the impact of the diagnosis. OBJECTIVES: Adopting a comprehensive approach on parental adjustment, we aimed to characterise the impact of the diagnosis on psychological distress and quality of life, in the early postdiagnosis stage. The effects of gender and the timing of the diagnosis were also examined. METHODS: In this cross-sectional study, 42 couples with healthy infants and 42 couples whose infants were prenatal or postnatally diagnosed with a congenital anomaly responded to the Brief Symptom Inventory-18 and to the World Health Organization Quality of Life-Brief instrument. RESULTS: In the early postdiagnosis stage, parents whose infants were diagnosed with a congenital anomaly presented higher levels of psychological distress than did the parents of healthy infants (F(2,79) = 6.23, p = .003), although they displayed similar levels of quality of life (F(4,78) = 0.62, p = .647). Mothers reported more adjustment difficulties than fathers in both groups. Receiving the diagnosis in the prenatal period was associated with higher maternal psychological quality of life (Z = -2.00, p = .045). CONCLUSION: The occurrence of a diagnosis of congenital anomaly during the transition to parenthood adds to an accumulation of stress-inducing events and manifests itself in psychopathological symptoms. Maintaining a positive evaluation of well-being may be understood as a parental resource to deal with the diagnosis. The importance of adopting a comprehensive perspective on parental adjustment is highlighted.
Authors: Marisa Garcia Rodrigues; Matilde Monteiro Soares; José Daniel Rodrigues; Luís Filipe Azevedo; Pedro Pereira Rodrigues; José Carlos Areias; Maria Emília Areias Journal: Qual Life Res Date: 2021-09-05 Impact factor: 4.147
Authors: Amy Jo Lisanti; Nadya Golfenshtein; Bradley S Marino; Liming Huang; Alexandra L Hanlon; Alicia J Lozano; Martha A Q Curley; Barbara Medoff-Cooper Journal: World J Pediatr Congenit Heart Surg Date: 2022-05
Authors: Nadya Golfenshtein; Alexandra L Hanlon; Janet A Deatrick; Barbara Medoff-Cooper Journal: Congenit Heart Dis Date: 2019-10-27 Impact factor: 2.007
Authors: Linda S Franck; Renée A Shellhaas; Monica Lemmon; Julie Sturza; Janet S Soul; Taeun Chang; Courtney J Wusthoff; Catherine J Chu; Shavonne L Massey; Nicholas S Abend; Cameron Thomas; Elizabeth E Rogers; Charles E McCulloch; Katie Grant; Lisa Grossbauer; Kamil Pawlowski; Hannah C Glass Journal: J Pediatr Date: 2020-06 Impact factor: 4.406
Authors: Kristy Wittmeier; Cindy Holland; Kendall Hobbs-Murison; Elizabeth Crawford; Chad Beauchamp; Brodie Milne; Melanie Morris; Richard Keijzer Journal: J Med Internet Res Date: 2014-12-11 Impact factor: 5.428