| Literature DB >> 31004247 |
Lily Cresswell1, Eilidh Cage2.
Abstract
Autistic adolescents are at increased risk of mental health difficulties. One potential factor contributing to this is identity development, although this hypothesis has been little explored. These adolescents also have to consider how autism forms their identity, a process called acculturation. This exploratory study examined the relationships between identity, acculturation and mental health in autistic adolescents. Twenty-four participants completed measures investigating identity, acculturation and mental health. Findings suggested mental health was not related to personal identity. Mental health scores did not differ between acculturation groups, however those aligned to non-autistic culture tended to generate more positive self-statements than those aligned to neither culture. These findings suggest autistic adolescents should be encouraged to explore autistic culture and supported in constructing their identity.Entities:
Keywords: Acculturation; Adolescence; Identity; Mental health
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31004247 PMCID: PMC6606666 DOI: 10.1007/s10803-019-04016-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Autism Dev Disord ISSN: 0162-3257
Sample characteristics for each acculturation group
|
| Age in years (mean, | Verbal IQ (mean, | Gender (male:female) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Marginalised (alignment to non-autistic culture) | 7 | 13.00 (2.00) | 105.71 (24.10) | 6:1 |
| Bicultural (alignment to both cultures) | 7 | 14.57 (2.37) | 111.57 (20.86) | 6:1 |
| Assimilated (alignment to neither culture) | 7 | 14.29 (2.69) | 110.29 (18.29) | 6:1 |
| Separated (alignment to autistic culture) | 3 | 12.00 (.00) | 111.67 (3.06) | 3:0 |
Means, standard deviations and ranges for Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire, the twenty statements task and the Autism Identity Scale
| Sample mean (SD) | General population mean | |
|---|---|---|
| SDQ scale items | ||
| Total difficulties | 14.4 (6.01) | 7.1 |
| Emotional problems | 3.8 (2.26) | 1.6 |
| Behavioural problems | 2.3 (2.26) | 1.3 |
| Hyperactivity | 4.9 (2.29) | 2.8 |
| Peer problems | 3.4 (1.79) | 1.4 |
| Prosocial* | 6.6 (2.28) | 8.6 |
| TST scores | ||
| Identity strength | 11.4 (4.77) | |
| Identity complexity | 3.8 (1.55) | |
| Identity quality | 0.8 (0.22) | |
| % Positive statements | 36.8 (25.8) | |
| % Negative statements | 19.3 (25.5) | |
| % Neutral statements | 43.8 (23.5) | |
| AIS scale scores | ||
| AIS1 | 46.8 (7.05) | |
| AIS2 | 56.2 (9.64) | |
Range of SDQ scale scores: total difficulties = 0–40; emotional problems, behavioural problems, hyperactivity, peer problems, prosocial = 0–10. Range of TST scale scores: identity strength = number of ‘I am’ statements produced (0–20); identity complexity = number of categories (1–7); identity quality = specific items divided by total items (0–1). Range of AIS scores = 32–80
*Higher prosocial scores indicate better prosocial functioning
Summary of hierarchical regression analysis for personal identity variables predicting mental health in autistic adolescents (n = 24)
| Step one |
| Step two |
| |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| B | SE B | β | B | SE B | β | |||
| Age | − 26 | .59 | − .98 | .67 | − .27 | .71 | − .10 | .71 |
| Gender | 3.59 | 4.16 | .20 | .40 | 3.35 | 5.26 | .19 | .53 |
| Verbal IQ | − .02 | .08 | − .06 | .81 | − .02 | .09 | − .06 | .82 |
| TST strength | − .23 | .39 | − .18 | .55 | ||||
| TST complexity | .67 | 1.44 | .17 | .64 | ||||
| TST quality | .52 | 10.45 | .02 | .96 | ||||
Fig. 1Mean SDQ total difficulties score according to acculturation group (marginalised = alignment to non-autistic culture; bicultural = alignment to both cultures; assimilated = alignment to neither culture; separated = alignment to autistic culture)
Fig. 2Mean percentage of positive and negative TST statements produced according to acculturation group (marginalised = alignment to non-autistic culture; bicultural = alignment no both cultures; assimilated = alignment to neither culture; separated = alignment to autistic culture). *p= .005