Social and Family Challenges of Having a Child Diagnosed with Phelan-McDermid Syndrome: A Qualitative Study of Parents’ Experiences
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Study Design
2.2. Participants, Context, and Sampling Strategies
2.3. Data Collection
2.4. Data Analysis
2.5. Rigor
3. Results and Discussions
3.1. Theme 1: Challenges in the Relationship as a Couple
“I think these things either bring you together or completely separate you. In my case, it brought me much closer to my wife. Without her, I couldn’t have gotten through the diagnosis.”(P32).
“This affects you to such an extent that the situation is no longer sustainable. The way we treated each other changed. We didn’t talk, we didn’t understand each other… we just argued. And we decided to separate.”(P19).
“Your marriage contract didn’t include this extra work and these difficulties… but in the end, you need to have a lot of patience, a lot of respect for the other person… realizing that the other person is going through the same things as you… and is suffering the same, and talking about it, letting it all out…”(P17).
“We are almost roommates with burdens. No sexual relations or anything. No energy or desire to do anything.”(P24).
“It really affects us and even though we don’t have time or strength, we always try to do something together, so that this part of the couple doesn’t die because I think it’s very important.”(P6).
3.2. Theme 2: Challenges within the Family and Close Social Relationships
“Relationships with the family are no longer the same… in the end you stop doing things with them because ultimately you get more stressed. The most important thing for everyone is their children’s problems and no one puts themselves in your place…the worst thing is the looks of pity…”(P3).
“… in the end you don’t go out because it’s bad faces, they [people around you] don’t understand and it seems to bother them. I can’t control my little girl needing to scream or moan. Sometimes to go to suffer or have a drink in a hurry, rushed and overwhelmed and stressed about whether they [people] will say something, well I may as well not go.”(P8).
“We have met a lot of new people by getting into the disability world, and I think these relationships are richer and stronger. We understand each other because we experience very similar situations.”(P19).
“It’s very hard when you see how people laugh at your son, or how they don’t understand him… they don’t understand him and they don’t understand us…”(P8).
“… people stare very blatantly… even unkindly, and you notice that only people who are immersed in this world are the ones not staring at you… it’s very sad.”(P17).
“… his siblings have had fights at school because he can’t see them picking on his sick brother, he takes it very badly and doesn’t understand why they laugh at him.”(P30).
3.3. Theme 3: Challenges in the Educational-School Environment
“At school he’ s the kid who’s annoying. And who does he get stuck with every year? The one [teacher] who is new to the school. In the end, either you go and fight with the school and he’s the one who gets hurt, or you don’t do anything, and we see this year go by and next year we’ll see.”(P30).
“… they don’t understand that he doesn’t do it on purpose, and they told me he was spoiled because of me.”(P2).
“… She is very much supported at school, and they are very supportive of her. The support is both academic and human, and for me it has been crucial. I value that more than the fact that they learn.”(P14).
3.4. Theme 4: Challenges in the Healthcare Environment and with Healthcare Professionals
“… in neurology they are supposed to be the ones with more specialization or the ones who give me more answers… but that’s not the case. What the neurologist does is ask me how the child is doing and gives me an appointment for a year from now.”(P9).
“The poor [doctor] doesn’t even know where this is coming from… he doesn’t know how to treat him…”(P29).
“In the end, the specialists see him once a year, his pediatrician sees him almost once a month. He’s like that person we have as a reference, who reassures you because he knows who my child is and what’s wrong with him or what he needs.”(P25).
“In the emergency room, they don’t care. What they care about is recording and spelling everything right. Their biggest concern is to write the name of the syndrome correctly, nothing else is relevant…look at my son, he’ s not a syndrome.”(P9).
“They have no idea what the syndrome is, they make funny faces… The last few times we’ve gone, I’ve gone ahead and said they have autism, so they understand and attend to it sooner and don’t leave you waiting.”(P22).
3.5. Theme 5: Reconnection through the PMS Association
“… it was super hard to get to know the association because we got a reality check. We saw how there are many children who are 100% dependent.”(P6).
“… thanks to the association we have a lot of information that otherwise would not have reached us because the doctors don’t explain it to you… if we didn’t have the support of the association, we would be hopeless.”(P24).
“With them [other families] you don’t have to explain anything, and you have an amazing connection, without having anything in common other than your child’s lack of chromosomes…”(P4).
“… I get very overwhelmed when all the parents discuss their problems. Because of that, I don’t participate much, I’m not prepared.”(P16).
3.6. Limitations
4. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Research Areas | Questions |
---|---|
Illness | What is it like living with a child with Phelan McDermid Syndrome? What is most relevant to you? |
Family planning | How does the disease affect your life as a couple? How does the disease affect your sexual relations? Have you considered the idea of having children again? |
Family relationships | How does the disease affect your family life? What do you think about the impact or repercussion of the disease on some members of your family? Why? |
Social relations | Do you think having a child with Phelan McDermid syndrome affects their social relationships? How? |
Relationship with the health professional and access to health resources | How is the care you receive from the health professional? Do you think they understand your child’s illness? What is most important to you in your relationship with healthcare professionals? How do you think your relationship with your healthcare professional can influence you, your child, and your illness? Have you ever had to go to the emergency department for any reason? What was the care related to the disease like? Was it known? What would you say was most relevant about your visit to the emergency department? |
Relationship with the school | At school, how would you describe the attention you receive? How is your relationship with the schoolteachers? Do you think this relationship is important? |
Areas of Field Notes | Contents of Field Notes |
---|---|
Content description and data collection process | Setting and context description: place of data collection. Participants: gestures, non-verbal communication, emotional responses. Content of interview. Emphasis on specific aspects narrated. Key words identified (from participant during interviews) oriented to study new concepts, contexts, situations. Incidents or relevant events during the interview: abandonment, presence of other relatives, interruption of the interview, emotional response to the questions, etc. New topics or research areas: concepts, definitions, models, theories. New bibliography to be consulted. Descriptions of the data collection process: difficulties, participant response to the use of online interviewing. |
Reflexivity | Researchers´ role during data collection Researchers’ role during interview Researchers’ interpretations regarding interviews Identification of prejudices and/or stereotypes during data collection. Data collection process. |
Criteria | Techniques Performed and Application Procedures |
---|---|
Credibility | Investigator triangulation: each interview was analyzed by two researchers. Team meetings were performed in which the analyses were compared, and categories and themes were identified. |
Triangulation of methods of data collection: semistructured interviews were conducted and researcher field notes were kept. | |
Participant validation (member-checking): asking the participants to confirm the data obtained at the stages of data collection. All participants were offered the opportunity to review the audio and/or video records to confirm their experience. None of the participants made additional comments. | |
Transferability | In-depth descriptions of the study performed, providing details of the characteristics of researchers, participants, contexts, sampling strategies, and the data collection and analysis procedures. |
Dependability | Audit by an external researcher: an external researcher assessed the research protocol, focusing on aspects concerning the methods applied and study design. An external researcher specifically checked the description of the coding tree, the major themes, participants’ quotations, quotation identification, and theme descriptions. |
Confirmability | Investigator triangulation, member-checking, and data collection triangulation. |
Researcher reflexivity was encouraged by the performance of reflexive reports and by describing the rationale behind the study. |
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García-Bravo, C.; Palacios-Ceña, D.; García-Bravo, S.; Pérez-Corrales, J.; Pérez-de-Heredia-Torres, M.; Martínez-Piédrola, R.M. Social and Family Challenges of Having a Child Diagnosed with Phelan-McDermid Syndrome: A Qualitative Study of Parents’ Experiences. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2022, 19, 10524. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph191710524
García-Bravo C, Palacios-Ceña D, García-Bravo S, Pérez-Corrales J, Pérez-de-Heredia-Torres M, Martínez-Piédrola RM. Social and Family Challenges of Having a Child Diagnosed with Phelan-McDermid Syndrome: A Qualitative Study of Parents’ Experiences. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2022; 19(17):10524. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph191710524
Chicago/Turabian StyleGarcía-Bravo, Cristina, Domingo Palacios-Ceña, Sara García-Bravo, Jorge Pérez-Corrales, Marta Pérez-de-Heredia-Torres, and Rosa Mª Martínez-Piédrola. 2022. "Social and Family Challenges of Having a Child Diagnosed with Phelan-McDermid Syndrome: A Qualitative Study of Parents’ Experiences" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 19, no. 17: 10524. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph191710524
APA StyleGarcía-Bravo, C., Palacios-Ceña, D., García-Bravo, S., Pérez-Corrales, J., Pérez-de-Heredia-Torres, M., & Martínez-Piédrola, R. M. (2022). Social and Family Challenges of Having a Child Diagnosed with Phelan-McDermid Syndrome: A Qualitative Study of Parents’ Experiences. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 19(17), 10524. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph191710524