| Literature DB >> 23284923 |
Maartje Kouwenberg1, Carolien Rieffe, Stephanie C P M Theunissen, Mark de Rooij.
Abstract
Victimization is a relatively common, yet serious problem, with potentially severe consequences for children's psychosocial and academic functioning. Children who are Deaf or Hard of Hearing (DHH) may be at a higher risk for victimization than hearing children. The aims of the present study were to compare DHH and hearing children on i) self-reported experiences of victimization and ii) associations between victimization, parental- and child variables. In total 188 children (mean age 11;11 years) from the Netherlands and Dutch-speaking part of Belgium participated in the study. No difference between DHH and hearing children were found on general experiences of victimization. However, differences between the groups were found on specific forms of experienced victimization and on the associations between victimization and parental variables. For DHH children, parental sensitivity and parents who challenge their DHH children to become competent in the practical, emotional, cognitive and social domain is associated with them being less victimized. For hearing children at this age these relations were reversed, absent or more complex. Finally, DHH children in special schools were more victimized than DHH children in regular schools. It can be concluded that parents can play an important role in reducing social problems experienced by DHH children and young adolescents.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23284923 PMCID: PMC3526587 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0052174
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Characteristics of Participants.
| Total sample (N = 188) | ||
| DHH | Hearing | |
| Number of children - | 94 | 94 |
| Mean age in years ( | 12;02 (1;10) | 11;09 (1;04) |
| Age range in years | 9;03–16;00 | 9;02–14;07 |
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| Male | 48 (51%) | 44 (47%) |
| Female | 46 (49%) | 50 (53%) |
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| Mother/Father/ | 70 (75%)/17 (18%)/ | 71 (76%)/15 (16%)/ |
| Both/missing | 6 (6%)/1 (1%) | 6 (6%)/2 (2%) |
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| One-parent/Two-parent/ | 11 (12%)/83 (88%)/ | 16 (17%)/76 (81%)/ |
| missing | - | 2 (2%) |
| Socioeconomic status mean (SD) | 11.6 (2.2) | 11.9 (2.4) |
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| ||
| Both parents Dutch | 85 (90%) | 78 (83%) |
| One or both parents other ethnicity | 9 (10%) | 13 (14%) |
| missing | - | 3 (3%) |
Socioeconomic status score was measured by parental education, occupation, and net income.
Characteristics specific for the DHH Sample.
| DHH sample (n = 94) | |
|
| |
| Moderate (40–60 dB) | 25 (27%) |
| Severe (61–90 dB) | 20 (21%) |
| Profound (>90 dB) | 45 (48%) |
| missing | 4 (4%) |
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| |
| Oral language only | 72 (77%) |
| Sign or sign-supported language | 22 (23%) |
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| |
| Regular education | 65 (69%) |
| Special education | 29 (31%) |
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| |
| Hearing aid | 56 (60%) |
| Cochlear implant (CI) | 38 (40%) |
| Mean age of implantation | 4;01 (1;00–10;08) |
| Mean number years of CI use ( | 8;02 (2;02–13;00) |
Hearing losses of the DHH children were calculated by averaging unaided hearing thresholds at 500, 1000, and 2000 Hertz.
Psychometric Properties of Questionnaires.
| No. of items | Range | Alpha | Means (SD) | |||
| DHH | H | DHH | H | |||
| Victimization | 10 | 1–3 | .81 | .71 | 1.48 (.37) | 1.45 (.29) |
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| ||||||
| Parental Sensitivity (parent-report) | 10 | 1–5 | .83 | .80 | 4.21 (.45) | 4.19 (.41) |
| Parental Sensitivity (child-report) | 6 | 1–3 | .74 | .72 | 2.61 (.33) | 2.78 (.26) |
| Parents' EI | 30 | 1–7 | .85 | .74 | 5.60 (.63) | 5.69 (.60) |
| Parents' Expectations | 21 | 1–3 | .83 | .77 | 2.77 (.21) | 2.70 (.20) |
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| Anger | 4 | 1–3 | .79 | .80 | 1.36 (.39) | 1.44 (.45) |
| Sadness | 4 | 1–3 | .86 | .81 | 1.36 (.47) | 1.43 (.44) |
| Communication; parents - DHH children | 6 | 1–3 | .70 | n.a. | 2.48 (.38) | n.a. |
Note. DHH, Deaf or Hard of Hearing; H, Hearing; EI, Emotional Intelligence; n.a., not applicable.
p<.001.
Items in the Victimization Questionnaire.
| 1 | Are you hit, pushed or kicked? |
| 2 | Are you called names? |
| 3 | Are mean things said to you? (also by msn, text message, email or social media) |
| 4 | Do other children talk viciously about you? |
| 5 | Are you laughed at? |
| 6 | Are your things/belongings snatched? |
| 7 | Are others ignoring you? |
| 8 | Are you told that you cannot participate? |
| 9 | Do others make you do things, which you actually do not want to do? |
| 10 | Are you invited to parties? ( |
Spearman Correlations between Victimization, Parental- and Child variables.
| Parental variables | Child variables | ||||||
| 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | ||
| 1 | Victimization | .18/−.17 | −.22 | −.07 | −.05/−.35 | .22 | .41 |
| 2 | Parental Sensitivity (parent-report) | - | .02 | .40 | −.10/.21 | −.12 | −.05 |
| 3 | Parental Sensitivity (child-report) | - | .09 | .08 | −.20 | −.16 | |
| 4 | Parents' EI | - | .10 | −.04 | −.05 | ||
| 5 | Parents' Expectations | - | −.11 | −.14 | |||
| 6 | Anger | - | .16/.55 | ||||
| 7 | Sadness | - | |||||
Note. Correlations are provided separately for Hearing and DHH participants when these were found to be significant different (using Fisher Transformation) (Hearing/DHH).
p<.05,
p<.01,
p<.001.
Hierarchical Regression Analysis predicting Victimization from Parental and Child variables.
| Victimization | |||
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| |
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| 9.9% | ||
| Hearing status | .05 | ||
| Parental Sensitivity Parent-report | −.06 | ||
| Parental Sensitivity Child-report | −.18 | ||
| Parents' EI | .05 | ||
| Parents' Expectations | −.22 | ||
|
| 23.6% | 13.7% | |
| Hearing status | .09 | ||
| Parental Sensitivity Parent-report | −.01 | ||
| Parental Sensitivity Child-report | −.11 | ||
| Parents' EI | .03 | ||
| Parents' Expectations | −.16 | ||
| Anger | .06 | ||
| Sadness | .37 | ||
|
| 29.4% | 5.8% | |
| Parental Sensitivity Parent-report | .23 | ||
| Sadness | .31 | ||
| Hearing Status | −.32 | ||
| Hearing Status | −.21 | ||
Note. Hearing status means DHH or hearing. In Step 3 only significant main- and interaction effects are shown in the table.
p<.05,
p<.01,
p<.001.
Figure 1Associations between Parental Sensitivity PR and Victimization for DHH (dotted line) and Hearing Children separately.
Figure 2Associations between Parent's Expectations and Victimization for DHH (dotted line) and Hearing Children separately.