OBJECTIVE: To examine parenting representations and feeding interactions of mothers and their children with cerebral palsy (CP) and the extent to which mothers' representations predict their feeding behavior beyond other mother and child characteristics. METHODS: Fifty-eight mothers of children with mild to severe CP ages 16 to 52 months were interviewed with an adapted form of the Parent Development Interview (PDI). Correlation and regression analyses examined relations between representations (compliance with parental requests, achievement, secure base, enmeshment, worry about the child's future, and emotional pain), demographic characteristics, diagnostic severity, and developmental status. RESULTS: Mothers with more compliance-related concerns showed less sensitivity, acceptance, and delight during feeding. Mothers experiencing more emotional pain displayed more hostility. Mothers reporting worries about the child displayed sensitivity and delight. Representations of compliance-related experiences and worry about the child's future accounted for significant increments in explained variance in mothers' feeding behavior, after we controlled for children's skills and abilities. CONCLUSIONS: Findings suggest maternal representations of relationships are associated with caregiving behavior for mothers of children with CP apart from other child and maternal characteristics and may be a useful focus for research and practice related to parenting children with special needs.
%0 Journal Article
%1 Sayre2001
%A Sayre, J. M.
%A Pianta, R. C.
%A Marvin, R. S.
%A Saft, E. W.
%D 2001
%J J Pediatr Psychol
%K Adaptation, Psychological; Adult; Aged; Cerebral Palsy; Child, Preschool; Feeding Behavior; Female; Hostility; Humans; Infant; Internal-External Control; Male; Mother-Child Relations; Mothers; Personality Development; Sick Role
%N 6
%P 375--384
%T Mothers' representations of relationships with their children: relations with mother characteristics and feeding sensitivity.
%V 26
%X OBJECTIVE: To examine parenting representations and feeding interactions of mothers and their children with cerebral palsy (CP) and the extent to which mothers' representations predict their feeding behavior beyond other mother and child characteristics. METHODS: Fifty-eight mothers of children with mild to severe CP ages 16 to 52 months were interviewed with an adapted form of the Parent Development Interview (PDI). Correlation and regression analyses examined relations between representations (compliance with parental requests, achievement, secure base, enmeshment, worry about the child's future, and emotional pain), demographic characteristics, diagnostic severity, and developmental status. RESULTS: Mothers with more compliance-related concerns showed less sensitivity, acceptance, and delight during feeding. Mothers experiencing more emotional pain displayed more hostility. Mothers reporting worries about the child displayed sensitivity and delight. Representations of compliance-related experiences and worry about the child's future accounted for significant increments in explained variance in mothers' feeding behavior, after we controlled for children's skills and abilities. CONCLUSIONS: Findings suggest maternal representations of relationships are associated with caregiving behavior for mothers of children with CP apart from other child and maternal characteristics and may be a useful focus for research and practice related to parenting children with special needs.
@article{Sayre2001,
abstract = {OBJECTIVE: To examine parenting representations and feeding interactions of mothers and their children with cerebral palsy (CP) and the extent to which mothers' representations predict their feeding behavior beyond other mother and child characteristics. METHODS: Fifty-eight mothers of children with mild to severe CP ages 16 to 52 months were interviewed with an adapted form of the Parent Development Interview (PDI). Correlation and regression analyses examined relations between representations (compliance with parental requests, achievement, secure base, enmeshment, worry about the child's future, and emotional pain), demographic characteristics, diagnostic severity, and developmental status. RESULTS: Mothers with more compliance-related concerns showed less sensitivity, acceptance, and delight during feeding. Mothers experiencing more emotional pain displayed more hostility. Mothers reporting worries about the child displayed sensitivity and delight. Representations of compliance-related experiences and worry about the child's future accounted for significant increments in explained variance in mothers' feeding behavior, after we controlled for children's skills and abilities. CONCLUSIONS: Findings suggest maternal representations of relationships are associated with caregiving behavior for mothers of children with CP apart from other child and maternal characteristics and may be a useful focus for research and practice related to parenting children with special needs.},
added-at = {2014-07-19T21:14:21.000+0200},
author = {Sayre, J. M. and Pianta, R. C. and Marvin, R. S. and Saft, E. W.},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/23cf4416921f90387792a479f7c85f831/ar0berts},
groups = {public},
interhash = {43445730cb6a36c53bb4a4333cbde077},
intrahash = {3cf4416921f90387792a479f7c85f831},
journal = {J Pediatr Psychol},
keywords = {Adaptation, Psychological; Adult; Aged; Cerebral Palsy; Child, Preschool; Feeding Behavior; Female; Hostility; Humans; Infant; Internal-External Control; Male; Mother-Child Relations; Mothers; Personality Development; Sick Role},
month = Sep,
number = 6,
pages = {375--384},
pmid = {11490040},
timestamp = {2014-07-19T21:14:21.000+0200},
title = {Mothers' representations of relationships with their children: relations with mother characteristics and feeding sensitivity.},
username = {ar0berts},
volume = 26,
year = 2001
}