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Coping skills training for children: Effects on distress before, during, and after hospitalization for surgery.
Authors:Zastowny  Thomas R; Kirschenbaum  Daniel S; Meng  Anne L
Abstract:Tested the hypothesis that coping skills (COS) intervention would help children adapt to hospitalization better than anxiety reduction (AR) or information interventions, using 33 parent–child dyads (children's mean age 7.2 yrs). All groups received the information procedure that described hospitalization and surgery experiences via a puppetry film. In the AR group, parents also learned procedures to help them reduce their own distress. Parents in the COS group learned how to help children use coping self-talk and related techniques. Results show that the AR and COS groups, compared to the information group, reduced children's self-reported fearfulness and parents' reported distress. The COS group, compared to the information group, exhibited fewer maladaptive behaviors during hospitalization and less problematic behavior in the preadmission week and 2nd postdischarge week. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved)
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