New research published in Journal of Family Studies
this month reveals that grandparents who care for grandchildren with
abnormal emotional and hyperactive symptoms are more likely to
experience lower levels of life satisfaction.
The
study also suggests that there are implications for their
grandchildren, with children involved in this parenting arrangement
showing a greater frequency of emotional and behavioural problems than
the normative population.
The
study examined a sample of 100 grandparents with an average age of
63.14 who cared for a mean of 1.61 grandchildren, with an average age of
9.48 years-old. The research was conducted through a series of
questionnaires and surveys. Participants completed the child mental
health measures for each of their grandchildren.
A
negative relationship was also found between the availability of social
support for grandparents and reported feelings of stress, anxiousness
and depression. The authors of the research comment that such a
relationship ‘is especially profound in light of evidence that custodial
grandparents commonly report social isolation and peer alienation
associated with acting as a parent to their grandchild’.The research has profound implications for practitioners looking to work with this parent group.
Read the full article, free of charge, online at: www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/13229400.2015.1015215
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