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Family Quality of Life

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Carla Jackson and Mojdeh Bayat. Joe Lucyshyn and Beth DeGrace ... Programs are accountable for family as well as child outcomes. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Family Quality of Life


1
Family Quality of Life
  • What We Have Learned Five Years
  • Into a New Field of Study
  • Presented at IASSID-Europe
  • Maastricht, The Netherlands
  • August, 2006
  • Denise Poston and Ann Turnbull
  • with the contributions of many others
  • University of Kansas -- Beach Center on
    Disability
  • www.beachcenter.org
  • denisep_at_ku.edu

2
Thanks to Partners and Colleagues
  • Families of children with disabilities
  • Rud Turnbull
  • Jean Ann Summers, Nina Zuna, George Gotto
  • Janet Marquis, Lesa Hoffman, Kandace Fleming
  • Mian Wang and Hasheem Mannan
  • Jiyeon Park and Loui Lord Nelson
  • The IASSID QOL SIRG
  • Carla Jackson and Mojdeh Bayat
  • Joe Lucyshyn and Beth DeGrace
  • Beach Center office staff throughout the years

3
Big Ideas to Take Away
  • Family quality of life is a measurable construct.
  • The Beach Center Family Quality of Life Scale was
    developed using a rigorous process. Refinement
    continues.
  • The FQOL scale can and has been used for
    different purposes. How might you use it in your
    research and practice?
  • Research using the FQOL scale has added to our
    knowledge of family quality of life.

4
Why Study Family Quality of Life?
  • Previous family outcome measures focused on
    dysfunction or were narrow in scope.
  • Family quality of life is global, positive, and
    universal.
  • Supports and services for children with ID and
    their families should enhance family quality of
    life.
  • Programs are accountable for family as well as
    child outcomes.

5
Big Idea 2 Rigorous Development of the Beach
Center FQOL Scale
  • Qualitative inquiry (Poston et al 2003)
  • Tool development and initial validation (Park et
    al 2003)
  • Tool refinement (Hoffman et al in press)
  • CFA, model testing
  • Test retest
  • Concurrent validity
  • Tool use
  • Associated tool development

6
Family Quality of Life Model
7
Developing and TestingThe FQOL Model
  • Developing the model (EFA)
  • 208 families in 7 states mostly ages birth to
    12
  • Confirming the model (CFA)
  • 280 families in 1 state mostly ages birth to 5
  • Cronbach alphas for internal consistency
  • Evaluate model fit (?2, CFI, RMSEA)
  • Continued model testing
  • 120 families of children with autism
  • 385 families in Columbia (older model)
  • 107 couples (mothers and fathers)
  • 566 families of typically developing children

8
Big Idea 3 - Possible Uses for The Beach Center
FQOL Scale
  • Use in descriptive studies
  • Use as an outcome measure in program evaluation
  • Use as a dependent variable in experimental
    design studies (changes after an intervention)
  • Use as a needs assessment
  • Use for planning family support

9
Big Idea 4 - What We Are Learning About Family
Quality of Life
  • This is NOT a meta-analysis
  • Research conducted at The Beach Center and other
    research centers
  • Quantitative and qualitative data
  • Teaching and applications
  • Each additional piece of data helps build our
    theory of family quality of life
  • Big Idea 1 Family quality of life is a
    measurable construct

10
What We Are Learning From Qualitative Studies
  • Advocacy affects family quality of life -
    families feel a need to advocate, but wish they
    didnt have to alone
  • Spirituality affects family quality of life -
    provides meaning and source of support
  • Although ratings of satisfaction were high, it
    cannot be inferred that all the familys needs
    have been adequately met Carla Jackson (2005)
  • The effects of autism on the family
  • 34 reported both positive and negative effects
  • 30 negative effects
  • 28 positive effects
  • 8 not negative, but different

Family members articulated that their FQOL is
adversely affected in the areas of parenting,
family interaction, and meeting its daily
functions and goals as a result of dealing with
stressors of autism. Mojdeh Bayat, DePaul
University
11
What We Are Learning From Quantitative Studies
  • What we are learning about domains and
    Indicators?
  • What are the similarities and differences among
    different populations?
  • What are demographic and other predictors of
    family quality of life?
  • What contributes to family quality of life?

12
The Domains and Indicators
  • Domain mean scores
  • Item mean scores
  • Consistently lower scores
  • Having time to pursue interests
  • Having support to relieve stress
  • Having time to care for all family members
  • Consistently higher scores
  • Showing love for each other
  • Having adequate transportation
  • Getting medical care when needed

13
Differences Among Populations
  • Families of typically developing children (age
    4-5) rate their satisfaction higher on all items
  • Families of children with deafness respond more
    like families of typically developing children
    than families of children with ID or DD
  • Families with lower incomes rate their
    satisfaction lower
  • Families in Kansas seem to rate their
    satisfaction higher

14
Predictors and Contributors
  • Income and Severity of Disability as Predictors
  • 364 participants from 280 families of children
    with mild to moderate disabilities ages birth to
    5 in Kansas
  • Income is positive predictor for mothers
    satisfaction but not for fathers
  • Severity is negative predictor for mothers and
    fathers satisfaction

15
Predictors and Contributors
  • Impact of partnership and services
  • 180 parents of children in early intervention
    programs in Kansas
  • Assessed satisfaction with services, partnerships
    and family quality of life
  • The quality of partnerships with professionals
    affects FQOL
  • Adequacy of service affects FQOL
  • Partnerships are a partial mediator between
    services and FQOL

16
Predictors and Contributors
  • Relationship Between Community Participation and
    FQOL
  • 332 families of children with developmental and
    other disabilities ages birth through young
    adulthood in 8 states
  • Families who experience fewer challenges
    participating in the community report higher
    quality of life
  • Challenges with participation are most
    significantly related to Emotional Well-Being,
    Physical/Material Well-Being, and
    Disability-Related Support

17
Predictors and Contributors
  • Positive behavioral support intervention (single
    subject design) for child with life threatening
    food refusal - introduce snack routine
  • FQOL scores increase dramatically (old version of
    scale)
  • FI 3.7 to 4.7
  • P 2.9 to 3.9
  • HS 3.4 to 4.6
  • FR 2.6 to 3.6
  • DRS 2.4 to 3.8

Its imperative to do a FQOL measure with
families when implementing a home-based PBS
intervention. Joe Lucyshyn, University of
British Columbia, Canada
18
Predictors and Contributors
  • Positive Perceptions
  • N 175 families in of children ages 2-18 with
    autism spectrum disorder in Illinois
  • 2 components of perceptions positive
    contributions of the child to the family and
    causes of the disability
  • Perceptions of the childs positive contributions
    were predictive of FQOL
  • Income, childs age, and parental depression were
    strongest predictors of FQOL
  • Satisfaction with services were moderate
    predictors of FQOL

19
Predictors and Contributors
  • Impact of Deafness
  • 207 primary caregivers of children ages 2-72
    months in 39 states
  • 2 uses of FQOL scale satisfaction and impact -
    to what extent has deafness affected this area
    of your family life
  • Differences between groups and impact of deafness
  • No significant differences among demographic or
    intervention groups
  • Most significant impact on Emotional Well-Being
  • Smallest impact on Physical/Material Well-Being

20
Teaching the Application of Family Quality of
Life
  • Doctoral level special education family seminar
  • Website with success stories and tips for
    practitioners related to enhancing partnership
    and family quality of life in early intervention
  • Masters level occupational therapy on-line course
  • Use FQOL survey to interview
    families and to think about ways
    to support families

The information gathered gave me insights to
this family that I have never known before, even
after four years of working together. Student in
on-line family course
21
What We Still Need to Learn . . .
  • High satisfaction scores can give policy makers a
    false impression that all is well. Is there is a
    better response format than satisfaction?
  • How do we best collect and analyze data from
    multiple family members? Do we need to?
  • How does the FQOL scale work for families of
    adults living at home?
  • How does the FQOL scale work in cross-cultural,
    cross-language, and cross-country applications?
  • Does the Beach Center FQOL Scale correlate with
    the FQOL Survey (Brown et al)?
  • Which items are most predictive of overall FQOL?
  • What are the pivotal or cusp interventions
    that will most affect family quality of life?
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