Comparison of parents with and without disabilities raising teens: Information from the nhis and two national surveys. |
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Authors: | Olkin, Rhoda Abrams, Kelley Preston, Paul Kirshbaum, Megan |
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Abstract: | Objectives: To contrast families headed by parents with disabilities raising children ages 11-17 years with families headed by parents without disabilities. Study Design: There were 3 sources of data: (a) the National Health Institute Survey (National Center for Health Statistics, 2000), (b) a previous national survey (L. T. T. Barker & V. Maralani, 1997), (c) a new national survey of parents with disabilities (n = 273) and their teens (ages 11-17 years; n = 246) and a control group of parents without disabilities (n = 48) and their teens (n = 37). Main Measure: Participants completed a survey designed for this study. Results: Parents with disabilities were generally quite similar to parents without disabilities, with some notable differences, particularly in employment and income. Deaf parents exhibited certain differences from parents with other disabilities. Conclusion: Survey responses provided a snapshot of parents with disabilities and their families from community samples, including aspects in which disabled and nondisabled participants were similar. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved) |
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Keywords: | parents with disabilities adolescents national survey National Health Interview Survey Deaf parents parental attitudes adolescent attitudes household division of labor barriers demographics |
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