Improving Psychosocial Health, Coping, and Self-Efficacy in Parents of Sleep-Disturbed Young Children
Brandhorst I, Hautzinger M, Schlarb A (2016)
Journal of Psychology & Psychotherapy 6(2): 1000249.
Zeitschriftenaufsatz
| Veröffentlicht | Englisch
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Autor*in
Brandhorst, Isabel;
Hautzinger, Martin;
Schlarb, AngelikaUniBi
Abstract / Bemerkung
Objective: Various research has shown that mothers of sleep-disturbed young children experience poorer physical and mental health, show more symptoms of depression or anxiety, and demonstrate a higher level of stress. Coping strategies and self-efficacy might play an important role in this context. In the present study we aimed to investigate psychosocial health, coping, and the sleep-related self-efficacy of parents participating in an Internetbased treatment for sleep-disturbed young children (six months to four years of age).
Methods: N=199 mothers and N=197 fathers answered questionnaires regarding psychosocial health, coping, and sleep-related self-efficacy before, immediately after, and three months after treatment. Two intervention conditions (written information only vs. additional telephone support) were compared to a waiting-list control condition. The treatment essentially addressed the child´s sleep situation but also included information on parental coping and psychosocial health.
Results: Both parents showed impaired psychosocial health (depression, compulsiveness) and more maladaptive coping (rumination, self-blame) before treatment. Feelings of aggression were reported by mothers only. More psychopathological symptoms in both parents were related to more maladaptive coping strategies and less sleep-related self-efficacy. Adaptive coping was associated with higher sleep-related self-efficacy, while maladaptive coping was related to lower sleep-related self-efficacy in mothers only. Mothers in both treatment conditions improved their psychosocial health (e.g., depression, somatization, anxiety, aggression) and their ability to cope in some scales (increase: relaxation, trivialization; decrease: rumination) after treatment. For fathers, only a few changes were observed. The impaired sleep-related self-efficacy of both parents improved with treatment. Personal telephone support rarely affected the results.
Conclusion: Teaching parents to treat their child´s sleep problem can improve impairments in psychosocial health, coping, and self-efficacy predominantly in mothers.
Erscheinungsjahr
2016
Zeitschriftentitel
Journal of Psychology & Psychotherapy
Band
6
Ausgabe
2
Art.-Nr.
1000249
ISSN
2161-0487
Finanzierungs-Informationen
Open-Access-Publikationskosten wurden durch die Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft und die Universität Bielefeld gefördert.
Page URI
https://pub.uni-bielefeld.de/record/2903600
Zitieren
Brandhorst I, Hautzinger M, Schlarb A. Improving Psychosocial Health, Coping, and Self-Efficacy in Parents of Sleep-Disturbed Young Children. Journal of Psychology & Psychotherapy. 2016;6(2): 1000249.
Brandhorst, I., Hautzinger, M., & Schlarb, A. (2016). Improving Psychosocial Health, Coping, and Self-Efficacy in Parents of Sleep-Disturbed Young Children. Journal of Psychology & Psychotherapy, 6(2), 1000249. doi:10.4172/2161-0487.1000249
Brandhorst, Isabel, Hautzinger, Martin, and Schlarb, Angelika. 2016. “Improving Psychosocial Health, Coping, and Self-Efficacy in Parents of Sleep-Disturbed Young Children”. Journal of Psychology & Psychotherapy 6 (2): 1000249.
Brandhorst, I., Hautzinger, M., and Schlarb, A. (2016). Improving Psychosocial Health, Coping, and Self-Efficacy in Parents of Sleep-Disturbed Young Children. Journal of Psychology & Psychotherapy 6:1000249.
Brandhorst, I., Hautzinger, M., & Schlarb, A., 2016. Improving Psychosocial Health, Coping, and Self-Efficacy in Parents of Sleep-Disturbed Young Children. Journal of Psychology & Psychotherapy, 6(2): 1000249.
I. Brandhorst, M. Hautzinger, and A. Schlarb, “Improving Psychosocial Health, Coping, and Self-Efficacy in Parents of Sleep-Disturbed Young Children”, Journal of Psychology & Psychotherapy, vol. 6, 2016, : 1000249.
Brandhorst, I., Hautzinger, M., Schlarb, A.: Improving Psychosocial Health, Coping, and Self-Efficacy in Parents of Sleep-Disturbed Young Children. Journal of Psychology & Psychotherapy. 6, : 1000249 (2016).
Brandhorst, Isabel, Hautzinger, Martin, and Schlarb, Angelika. “Improving Psychosocial Health, Coping, and Self-Efficacy in Parents of Sleep-Disturbed Young Children”. Journal of Psychology & Psychotherapy 6.2 (2016): 1000249.
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