Journal of Personalized Medicine (Dec 2023)

Preschool Children with Hearing Loss: Social Communication and Parenting Stress

  • Magdalena Dall,
  • Christoph Weber,
  • Daniel Holzinger,
  • Doris Binder,
  • Johannes Hofer,
  • Sonja Horvarth,
  • Daiva Müllegger,
  • Christoph Rosenthaler,
  • Ruth Zöhrer,
  • Johannes Fellinger

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jpm14010047
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
p. 47

Abstract

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Studies on parenting stress (PS) in parents of children with hearing loss (HL) have found relationships between child behavior, language skills and parenting stress. The role of early social communication skills has not been researched before. The aim of this cross-sectional study was to investigate the relationship between child behavior, social communication and PS. The study was performed in a subgroup of a total population sample from the AChild (Austrian Children with Hearing Impairment–Longitudinal Databank) study. Preschool children (n = 81) with all degrees of HL and average cognitive functioning and their families were included, and the Parenting Stress Index (PSI) was used. Through factor component analysis, compound scores for externalizing/internalizing problem behavior and hyperactivity were analyzed. Although mean PS was not elevated, the proportion of those with elevated scores was higher compared with the norm population. There was a strong correlation between child behavior problems and PS (strongest correlation: externalizing problem behavior r = 0.643; p < 0.001). All three problem behaviors accounted for 49.7% of the variance in PS. An indirect effect of social communication on PS was almost completely mediated by problem behavior (especially hyperactivity). The importance of social communication development with respect to problem behavior and PS is highlighted.

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