| Literature DB >> 30567556 |
Lesley Uttley1, Jill Carlton2, Helen Buckley Woods2, John Brazier2.
Abstract
Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy (DMD) is a severe, life-limiting and incurable condition. However, studies estimating quality of life and those measuring actual quality of life in people living with DMD vary considerably. This discrepancy indicates potential difficulties with assessing quality of life using common generic quality of life instruments in this rare and unique population. This study sought to document the range of themes relevant to quality of life for people with DMD by examining the published literature and additionally to investigate the themes that are relevant to quality of life for carers and the wider family. Eligible studies for the review were primary studies of any study design that reported outcomes or themes relevant to quality of life for either people with DMD, their families, or both. A review of studies identified from searching medical bibliographic sources between 2010 and 2016 found 45 relevant published studies. A thematic framework is proposed to categorise the themes identified into: i. physical; ii. psychological; iii. Social; iv. well-being domains. A final "other" domain was included to encompass themes identified from the literature that are not covered by commonly used quality of life instruments. The rich variety of themes identified from the review highlights that DMD has a complex quality of life profile which is not currently captured by standard quality of life tools that are commonly employed in the healthcare setting. The findings also highlight that the resulting impact on the quality of life of carers and wider family of people with DMD requires consideration.Entities:
Keywords: Duchenne muscular dystrophy; Literature review; Quality of life; Thematic analysis; Wider family impact
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30567556 PMCID: PMC6299926 DOI: 10.1186/s12955-018-1062-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Qual Life Outcomes ISSN: 1477-7525 Impact factor: 3.186
Eligibility criteria for studies included in the review
| Inclusion criteria | Exclusion criteria |
|---|---|
| • Patients: Studies of adults and children of any age with a confirmed diagnosis of DMD, and/or of families and carers of people with DMD | • Studies of patients with other forms of MD |
Fig. 1Flow Diagram of Studies Identified and Included in the Review
Included Studies
| First author | Study type | Data source | N | Country | Method of quality of life measurement |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Baiardini et al. | Cross sectional survey | DMD boys & families | 27 | Italy | Parent-proxy HRQoL |
| Bendixen et al. | Case-control survey | DMD boys & controls | 50 | US | Self-reported QoL |
| Bendixen et al. | Cross sectional survey | DMD boys by age | 60 | US | Self-reported participation in daily activities |
| Bloetzer et al. | Cross sectional survey | DMD boys | 63 | Switzerland | Parent-proxy sleep disturbances |
| Bray et al. | Cohort survey, 6 month follow up | DMD boys & controls | 34 | Australia | Parent-proxy HRQoL |
| Bray et al. | Cross sectional survey | DMD boys & parents | 35 | Australia | Self-reported & parent-proxy HRQoL |
| Cavazza et al. | Cross sectional survey | Patients or caregiver | 422 | UK & 7 European countries | Self-reported or parent-proxy HRQoL |
| Dany et al. | Tool development | NMD patients | 159 | France | Self-reported HRQoL |
| Davison et al. | Qualitative study | DMD & other NMD adolescents | 13 | UK | Self-reported social well being |
| Elsenbruch et al. | Cross sectional survey | DMD children, adolescents & adults | 50 | Germany | Self-reported HRQoL |
| Garralda et al. | Cohort study | DMD boys | 19 | UK | Emotional impact of gene-modifying trial |
| Geers et al. | Case-control survey | DMD children, adults & matched controls | 36 | Germany | Self-reported HRQoL |
| Heutinck et al. | Case-control survey | DMD boys & healthy controls | 86 | Holland | Physical activity [respondent not reported] |
| Houwen et al. | Cross sectional survey | DMD boys & parents | 40 | Holland | Self-reported & parent-proxy HRQoL |
| Hunt et al. | Cross sectional interviews & survey | DMD boys & adult & parent pairs | 12 | UK | Self-reported & parent-proxy QoL |
| Klingels et al. | Tool development | Systematic review & expert opinion | 194 | Belgium | Activities of daily living |
| Landfelt et al. | Cross sectional multi-national survey | DMD patients & parents & general population reference values from Canada | 770 | UK, Europe & USA | Self-reported & parent-proxy HRQoL |
| Landfelt et al. | Cross sectional survey | Caregivers & general population reference values from Canada | 770 | UK, Europe & USA | Caregiver HRQoL & burden |
| Lim et al. | Cross sectional survey | DMD boys & parents | 63 | US | Self-reported & parent-proxy HRQoL |
| Lue et al. | Cross sectional survey | DMD adolescents & adults | 46 | Taiwan | HRQoL & global QoL [respondent not reported] |
| Ly et al. | Cross sectional survey | DMD adults | 10 | US | Self-reported or proxy social & medical support |
| Madsen et al. | Cross sectional survey | DMD adults | 79 | Denmark | Self-reported QoL |
| Magliano et al. | Cross sectional survey | Relatives of MD patients | 502 | Italy | Caregiver burden |
| Magliano et al. | Case-control survey | DMD parent vs Becker parent | 246 | Italy | Self-reported caregiver burden |
| Martinsen et al. | Cross sectional interview | DMD adults | 16 | Denmark | Self-reported dependence on care |
| Mason et al. | Cross sectional survey | DMD adults | 29 | Australia | Self-reported QoL |
| McSweeney et al. | Cross sectional survey | DMD children | 39 | Ireland | Self- reported & parent-proxy HRQoL |
| Messina et al. | Cohort survey, 12-month follow up | Ambulatory DMD | 98 | Italy | Self-reported & parent-proxy HRQOL |
| Nozoe et al. | Cross sectional survey | Mothers of DMD children & control mothers | 20 | Brazil | Parent sexual function |
| Ozyurt et al. | Case-control study | DMD, parents & controls | 17 | Turkey | Self-reported, parent-proxy QoL & parent anxiety |
| Pangalila et al. | Cross sectional survey | DMD adults | 80 | Holland | Patient HRQoL [respondent not reported] |
| Pangalila et al. | Cross sectional study | Parents of severely disabled DMD adults | 80 | Holland | Subjective caregiver burden |
| Peay et al. | Cohort survey, 2 yr. follow up | Mothers of DMD children | 205 | US | Caregiver burden |
| Peay et al. | Cross sectional survey | Parents of DMD children | 119 | US | Caregiver burden |
| Reha et al. | Cohort survey | DMD patients | 47 | US | Self-reported or parent-proxy QoL |
| Riss et al. | Cross sectional survey | DMD boys | 25 | US | Chart review & parent-proxy QoL |
| Simon et al. | Cohort survey, 1 year | DMD patients | 95 | Brazil | QoL during steroid therapy [respondent not reported] |
| Soares et al. | Cross sectional survey | DMD children & caregivers | 35 | Brazil | Patient QoL |
| Steffensen et al. | Cross sectional survey | DMD adults | 183 | UK & 6 European countries | Self-reported HRQoL |
| Thomas et al. | Cross sectional interview | Caregivers | 60 | India | Caregiver burden |
| Uzark et al. | Case-control survey | DMD boys, parents & matched controls | 117 | US | Self-reported & parent-proxy HRQoL |
| Wei et al. | Cross sectional survey | Families of DMD boys | 176 | Canada | Parent-proxy HRQoL |
| Wei et al. | Case-control survey | DMD children | 176 | Canada | Self- report & parent-proxy HRQoL |
| Wong et al. | Audit, interviews & survey | Clinical records & parent survey | 49 | Australia | Parents’ experiences from first noticing symptoms to receiving a diagnosis |
| Zamani et al. | Case-control survey | DMD boys, parents & healthy controls | 85 | Iran | Self-reported & parent-proxy QoL |
Survey scales, Questionnaires or Instruments Used across Studies
| Instrument Used | No. of studies |
|---|---|
| Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory (PedsQL) neuromuscular module version 3.0 online [ | 9 |
| SF-36 Health Survey [ | 6 |
| World Health Organization Quality of Life (WHOQoL) Scale [ | 5 |
| KIDSCREEN questionnaire (child and adolescent version and parent version) [ | 2 |
| EuroQol (EQ-5D 3 L) [ | 2 |
| Zarit Caregiver Burden Interview (ZBI) [ | 2 |
| Pittsburgh Sleep Quality questionnaire (PSQI) [ | 2 |
| Children’s Assessment of Participation and Enjoyment (CAPE) [ | 2 |
| Child Health Questionnaire parent form (CHQ-PF50) [ | 2 |
| Health Utilities Index Questionnaire (HUI) [ | 1 |
| SF-12 Health Survey [ | 1 |
| Fatigue Severity Scale [ | 1 |
| Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS) [ | 1 |
| Barthel Index (BI) [ | 1 |
| Family Problems Questionnaire (FPQ) [ | 1 |
| Muscular Dystrophy Care Schedule (MD-CS) [ | 1 |
| Female Sexual Function Index (FSFI) [ | 1 |
| Sleep Disturbance Scale for Children (SDSC) [ | 1 |
| Caregiver Strain Index (CSI) [ | 1 |
| Self-Rated Burden (SRB) [ | 1 |
| Care-related Quality of Life instrument (CarerQol) [ | 1 |
| Family Strain Questionnaire [ | 1 |
| Family Burden Assessment Scale [ | 1 |
| COPE Inventory (60-item) [ | 1 |
| Caregiver Well-Being Scale [ | 1 |
| Quality of Life in Neuromuscular Disease (QoL-NMD) [ | 1 |
| DISABKIDS Questionnaire for 10–16 years [ | 1 |
| Depressionsiventar fur Kinder und Jugendliche (DIKJ) [ | 1 |
| Beck Depression Inventory (BDI) [ | 1 |
| CARE-NMD questionnaire [ | 1 |
| State-Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI) [ | 1 |
| validated pediatric QOL survey (Still in progress) [ | 1 |
| Modified Brooks Scale (MBS) [ | 1 |
| Life Satisfaction Index for Adolescents (LSI-A) [ | 1 |
| Quality of Life Evaluation Scale (AUQUEI) [ | 1 |
| Activity Limitations (ACTIVLIM) [ | 1 |
Quality of Life Domains and Sub-Domains Identified Across the Included Studies
| Physical Domain | |
| Social Domain | |
| Psychological Domain | |
| Well-Being Domain | |
| Other Domain |
Themes and Trends Identified Under the Physical, Psychological, Social, Well-being and Other Domains for DMD Patients
| Physical Functioning Themes | |
| General physical QoL | Impaired QoL according to decline in ambulatory status [ |
| Impaired QoL reported (according to both self-report [ | |
| Self-report higher than parent [ | |
| Declines with age [ | |
| Impaired compared to controls/normative data [ | |
| Varies according to geographical status [ | |
| Impairment correlates with anxiety [ | |
| Impairment correlates with wheelchair or ventilator use [ | |
| Physical functioning QoL improvement with treatment [ | |
| Fractures occur more frequently in more ambulant stages [ | |
| Physical activity lower than for age-matched controls [ | |
| Health Behaviour | Physical activity less strenuous than age-matched controls [ |
| Physical activity decline with age by self-report [ | |
| More on-screen/sedentary behaviour with age [ | |
| Physical activity improvement with treatment by self-report or parent proxy [ | |
| Sleep | Sleep quality lower than controls by self-report or parent proxy [ |
| Problems initiating and maintaining sleep (DIMS), sleep-related breathing disorders and sleep hyperhidrosis by parent-proxy [ | |
| Pain | Pain correlates with reduced QoL [ |
| Occurrence of pain not reflected in associations of general QoL [ | |
| Pain complaints largely kept within the family [ | |
| Physical abilities restrict pain-coping strategies [ | |
| Activities of Daily Living | Problems with day-to-day practicalities compounds problems in other domains [ |
| Daily activities such as transportation to school are passive for majority of patients whereas controls use active transport [ | |
| Social Themes | |
| General Social QoL | Lower QoL for social domain than unaffected boys [ |
| Participation | Adolescents expressed longing for missed activities [ |
| Children perceive their ability to keep up with their peers as less difficult than their parents do [ | |
| Inability to participate in activities with peers further aggravates social problems [ | |
| Lack of correlation between decrease in participation and general QoL [ | |
| Low level of participation leads to life devoid of meaningful activities [ | |
| Social activities and participation not correlated with “social relationships” [ | |
| Decline of social participation with increasing age [ | |
| Significantly more time spent on screen time activities that controls [ | |
| Decrease in participation correlates with time to walk up stairs and decrease in physical activities [ | |
| Friends | Adolescents expressed longing for missed friends [ |
| Children and parents rate their children as having lower QoL regarding “friends” than controls [ | |
| Parents perceive lower HRQoL for social acceptance than their sons self-report [ | |
| Accessibility to homes becomes a physical barrier to visiting friends [ | |
| Carers have crucial role in enabling patients to see family and friends [ | |
| Relationships | Score low in the domain of social relationships compared to reference population [ |
| Few patients had expectations of successful future relationships [ | |
| School/Work | Most common school problem was missing school to go to doctor or hospital [ |
| Parent report more school days missed because of not feeling well than their children [ | |
| No difference to controls for “school-related” QoL [ | |
| Parents report practical difficulties with sending their child to school [ | |
| Hopes for future employment and education attenuated by lack of independence and difficulties accessing work experience [ | |
| Psychological Themes | |
| Psychosocial QoL | Psychosocial QoL lower than general paediatric public([ |
| Older patients did not tend to perceive lower psychosocial QoL despite increased physical limitations [ | |
| Patients receiving corticosteroids report no difference in psychosocial QoL compared with patients not receiving steroids [ | |
| Mental health QoL varies according to geographical status (better in North Western than Eastern Europe) [ | |
| Family income associates with better Generic Core Psychosocial score [ | |
| Happiness | Most patients rated as happy and in good health by caregivers compared to public preference which estimates substantial impairment [ |
| Parents rated their children lower for “general mood” and feelings than control parents [ | |
| Parents rated their children lower for “moods and emotions” than their children’s self-report [ | |
| Depression | Depressive symptoms were in the subclinical range and did not correlate with physical disability [ |
| Anxiety | Correlated with overall QoL and with physical health and psychological functioning [ |
| Patients worried about their future and about their family [ | |
| Coping | Emotional impact of trial participation mediated by baseline psychosocial stressors [ |
| Communication with family and friends is an important coping mechanism [ | |
| Coping mechanisms posited as reason for maintenance of psychosocial QoL in older boys [ | |
| Communication | Communication difficulties mean patients not always able to provide self-assessments [ |
| Parents underestimate their child’s HRQoL compared to self-report [ | |
| Motor impairments mean dependence on help to complete assessments may introduce reporting bias [ | |
| Dependence on help to complete assessments may inhibit respondents from admitting extent of feelings [ | |
| Patients often found it difficult to talk to non-medical people [ | |
| Patients rely on familiar people to be able to communicate effectively [ | |
| Well-Being Themes | |
| General Well-Being | Perceived HRQoL underestimated by parents compared to self-perception by self-report [ |
| Independence/ Self-Care | Parents help required to complete self-assessment [ |
| Patients become increasingly dependent on parent/carer with age [ | |
| Patients dependent on parents and carers to act on their behalf to relieve pain [ | |
| When patients are less able to take care of themselves independently, they perceive their physical abilities lower [ | |
| Parents help required to complete self-assessment [ | |
| Patients become increasingly dependent on parent/carer with age [ | |
| Dignity | Many patients consider their QoL as good and feel respected by society [ |
| Creative engagement and hobbies important to feelings of identity and autonomy [ | |
| Attitudes to accessibility are of great importance to patient’s integration in society [ | |
| Importance of patient’s needs and wishes as an individual to be respected [ | |
| Energy/Fatigue | Less fatigue correlates with better QoL [ |
| Low QoL for fatigue reported by patients [ | |
| Lower QoL for fatigue reported by patients than by patients [ | |
| Other Themes | |
| Accessibility/ Wheelchair Use | Use of electric wheelchairs can promote participation in activities [ |
| Affordable access to medical devices is central to maintenance of QoL as physical functioning deteriorates [ | |
| Access to public transport and access to the professional world were barriers to participation [ | |
| Intermittent wheelchair use associated with greater fatigue than children not using a wheelchair [ | |
| Wheelchair use correlates with poorer QoL [ | |
| Lack of wheelchair access to premises can be a barrier to participation and social activities [ | |
| Healthcare Service Provision | Earlier diagnosis benefits include ability to access specific treatments sooner, preparing for financial and practical issues in the future and informing reproductive planning [ |
| Large proportion of carers report adequate professional support [ | |
| Medical (e.g. splints, shower chairs) and leisure equipment (PlayStation) can exacerbate or influence pain [ | |
| Choices of equipment, seating, beds and routes of medication should be available to carers [ | |
| Patients felt nurses were sometimes not adequately trained in ventilator care [ | |
| Lack of knowledge from primary healthcare providers on the specific complications of DMD [ | |
| All adult patients (> 20 yrs.) required help around the clock [ | |
| Main driver of non-healthcare costs to the healthcare system is informal care [ | |
| Treatment Related/ Therapy Effects | Some medications were difficult for patients to swallow whilst others had side effects [ |
| Providing pre-emptive analgesics and adjunctive medication for common side effects alongside should be considered [ | |
| Potential emotional impact of trial participation on patient and family [ | |
| Higher incidence of fracture for patients on steroids [ | |
Themes and Trends Identified Under the Physical, Psychological, Social, Well-being and Other Domains for Carers
| Carer: Physical Functioning Themes | |
| General Physical QoL | Correlates with burden [ |
| Sleep | Poor quality of sleep correlates with hormonal changes related to stress [ |
| Poor quality of sleep correlates with sexual dysfunction [ | |
| Carer: Psychological Themes | |
| Happiness | Indicate similar levels of happiness to the general population [ |
| Depression | PARENT: Correlated with annual household cost burden and hours of leisure time devoted to informal care per week [ |
| Patient’s loss of ambulation reported as most emotionally difficult time for parents [ | |
| Parents report feelings of loss about child’s condition [ | |
| Anxiety | Correlated with annual household cost burden and hours of leisure time devoted to informal care per week [ |
| No difference between anxiety levels of patient mother versus controls [ | |
| High number of relatives report feeling worry about future of other family members [ | |
| Higher anxiety correlated with less active coping style [ | |
| Parents prioritised the worries about affected children and their care before worries regarding themselves [ | |
| Coping | Psychological adaptation to DMD predicted by resilience [ |
| Parents felt unable to bear the situation longer compared to parents of Becker MD [ | |
| Active coping style correlates with lower caregiver burden [ | |
| Emotional coping was most disrupted around the time of loss of ambulation [ | |
| Coping strategies such as positive reinterpretation and religion correlate with understanding of the illness [ | |
| Social support an important coping strategy [ | |
| Communication | Difficulties communicating about the condition with affected sons [ |
| Carer: Social Themes | |
| Participation | Constraints in leisure activities and neglect of hobbies frequently mentioned concern from parents [ |
| Perception of stigma in a public setting [ | |
| Friends | Psychological burden higher in those with lower social contacts and support from friends/relatives in emergencies [ |
| Relationships | Psychological burden higher for parents without a cohabiting partner [ |
| Parents report interpersonal issues or problems in family functioning [ | |
| Carer: Well-Being Themes | |
| General Well-Being | Caregiving described not only as a burden but as an important, rewarding activity [ |
| Caregiver well-being rated as moderate [ | |
| Carer: Other Themes | |
| Accessibility/ WheelcHair use | Patient’s transition to wheelchair reported as most emotionally difficult time [ |
| Treatment Related/ | Parental concern about getting right treatment for child and missing out on new treatments [ |
| Family resources | Family income restricts abilities to care for son [ |
| Higher family income correlates with better HRQoL [ | |
| Carer Burden | Higher perceived caregiver burden correlated with worse functional status in the child [ |
| Higher psychological burden in those who did not live with a partner [ | |
| Practical burden correlates with daily time in taking care of the patient [ | |
| Higher burden in relatives of DMD patients compared with LGMD and BMD [ | |
| High number of relatives report feeling guilt for having transmitted the illness to their children [ | |
| Burden correlates with duration of illness [ | |
| Burden higher among those with fewer social contacts and lower social support in emergencies [ | |
| Parent concerns about quality of care their sons received and problems with physical distance if/ when their sons leaves home [ | |
| Relates to time caring for children not functional dependence [ | |
| Carer age has no correlations with other factors relevant to burden [ | |
| Impact on Wider Family | DMD parents are significantly different to Becker MD parents for feelings of stigma and neglect of hobbies [ |
| Parents believed MD has a negative influence on the psychological well-being, and social life of unaffected children [ | |
| Difficulties among healthy siblings reported as higher by parents who were older, had higher burden and lower social contacts [ | |
| Support from own social contacts relied upon in event of carer illness [ | |
| Substantial differences between DMD and BMD caregivers ability for night waking; neglect of hobbies; work/household difficulties; taking holidays and financial difficulties [ | |
| Substantial number of parents believed patient’s condition negatively influenced psychological well-being of unaffected children [ | |
| Fathers reported lower levels of satisfaction with the family relationship than mothers [ | |
| Some parents reported interpersonal issues of problems in family functioning [ | |
| Substance use reported to be higher among male caregivers [ | |
| Carer: Physical Functioning Themes | |
| General Physical QoL | Correlates with burden [ |
| Sleep | Poor quality of sleep correlates with hormonal changes related to stress [ |
| Poor quality of sleep correlates with sexual dysfunction [ | |
| Carer: Psychological Themes | |
| Happiness | Indicate similar levels of happiness to the general population [ |
| Depression | PARENT: Correlated with annual household cost burden and hours of leisure time devoted to informal care per week [ |
| Patient’s loss of ambulation reported as most emotionally difficult time for parents [ | |
| Parents report feelings of loss about child’s condition [ | |
| Anxiety | Correlated with annual household cost burden and hours of leisure time devoted to informal care per week [ |
| No difference between anxiety levels of patient mother versus controls [ | |
| High number of relatives report feeling worry about future of other family members [ | |
| Higher anxiety correlated with less active coping style [ | |
| Parents prioritised the worries about affected children and their care before worries regarding themselves [ | |
| Coping | Psychological adaptation to DMD predicted by resilience [ |
| Parents felt unable to bear the situation longer compared to parents of Becker MD [ | |
| Active coping style correlates with lower caregiver burden [ | |
| Emotional coping was most disrupted around the time of loss of ambulation [ | |
| Coping strategies such as positive reinterpretation and religion correlate with understanding of the illness [ | |
| Social support an important coping strategy [ | |
| Communication | Difficulties communicating about the condition with affected sons [ |
| Carer: Social Themes | |
| Participation | Constraints in leisure activities and neglect of hobbies frequently mentioned concern from parents [ |
| Perception of stigma in a public setting [ | |
| Friends | Psychological burden higher in those with lower social contacts and support from friends/relatives in emergencies [ |
| Relationships | Psychological burden higher for parents without a cohabiting partner [ |
| Parents report interpersonal issues or problems in family functioning [ | |
| Carer: Well-Being Themes | |
| General Well-Being | Caregiving described not only as a burden but as an important, rewarding activity [ |
| Caregiver well-being rated as moderate [ | |
| Carer: Other Themes | |
| Accessibility/ Wheelchair Use | Patient’s transition to wheelchair reported as most emotionally difficult time [ |
| Treatment Related/ | Parental concern about getting right treatment for child and missing out on new treatments [ |
| Family Resources | Family income restricts abilities to care for son [ |
| Higher family income correlates with better HRQoL [ | |
| Carer Burden | Higher perceived caregiver burden correlated with worse functional status in the child [ |
| Higher psychological burden in those who did not live with a partner [ | |
| Practical burden correlates with daily time in taking care of the patient [ | |
| Higher burden in relatives of DMD patients compared with LGMD and BMD [ | |
| High number of relatives report feeling guilt for having transmitted the illness to their children [ | |
| Burden correlates with duration of illness [ | |
| Burden higher among those with fewer social contacts and lower social support in emergencies [ | |
| Parent concerns about quality of care their sons received and problems with physical distance if/ when their sons leaves home [ | |
| Relates to time caring for children not functional dependence [ | |
| Carer age has no correlations with other factors relevant to burden [ | |
| Impact on Wider Family | DMD parents are significantly different to Becker MD parents for feelings of stigma and neglect of hobbies [ |
| Parents believed MD has a negative influence on the psychological well-being, and social life of unaffected children [ | |
| Difficulties among healthy siblings reported as higher by parents who were older, had higher burden and lower social contacts [ | |
| Support from own social contacts relied upon in event of carer illness [ | |
| Substantial differences between DMD and BMD caregivers ability for night waking; neglect of hobbies; work/household difficulties; taking holidays and financial difficulties [ | |
| Substantial number of parents believed patient’s condition negatively influenced psychological well-being of unaffected children [ | |
| Fathers reported lower levels of satisfaction with the family relationship than mothers [ | |
| Some parents reported interpersonal issues of problems in family functioning [ | |
| Substance use reported to be higher among male caregivers [ | |