Whether Disabled Parents Receive Personal Assistance for Parenting and the Consequences for Children—An Interview Study
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Research on Parenting with Personal Assistance
1.2. Rights for Parents and Children in a Disability Framework
2. Materials and Methods
3. Results
3.1. To Have or Not to Have Personal Assistance
I received PA and I am very happy for that. If I had not got that help during that time (while he was a student) I would not have graduated, and I would not be where I am today.… They should really broaden what you can get PA for. Look at it as an investment I had… I can say that had I not got the help in this situation, I would not have my own house and my work and so on… I have paid taxes now for many years, so I have probably re-paid that cost.
When Christian became a father, he no longer received PA due to more narrow assessment, so he talks about how his wife and at times his mother took care of his daughter in practical aspects when she was a toddler.
I take care of my own personal needs, but that is at the expense of other persons and of other things. I take care of my work, but not so much my home… What the state has won, you could say, has been sacrificed by someone else, and by me, too. I have had to adapt to the situation.
I have noticed that if I am to be a normal parent in this aspect then I need assistance, or I will be an abnormal parent in the time it takes to help her dress. When she was younger and there was a sweater and this and that, and I could not help at all. It took so long time. I started two hours early to be finished and still I did not succeed, so I called my parents and they came to help. That was tough.
In the normal case, you know a new mom would want to be with her newborn in her own bubble with her family. And then to let someone in… I was afraid to allow someone in. Maybe an “expert” would say you should not do like that, and I would not be strong enough to take the discussions. So, I asked my sister (to be the assistant) and I was worried about that, too. It does alter our relationship. But it went well, and she stopped after the first year, and I felt safe enough to allow someone else in.
I have always been crystal clear about that I am the mom and the assistants are not. They cannot step in at any point to take over… No, we are playing by my rules.
3.2. Fear of Losing the PA Support
We will see how long this will last, you never know nowadays. They cut down wherever they can, so… This fear is ever present because as things are for me now, to lose hours means that I cannot live the life I live now, quite simply.
During all these years, I have had PA since 1995 I think, and during all these years I have been in fear of losing the PA … I took for granted I would get more time when I had my child, so I asked for a re-assessment myself. I thought my new parenthood would be a cause for more time in my PA. But I got a negative assessment to this request. They did not even understand my request.
There came a new official and I was so scared that I would lose my assistance, but he told me to be calm. He would have to determine his decision with his manager, but he thought that it was not right that I had tried to raise my needs for assistance in parenting and no one had listened. So, he went on asking questions about my need for assistance as a parent. What I would like to do with my daughter. My daughter has a father, but I would like to be the mother in all ways, being a bit playful with my daughter, you know. Or do outings with her, accompany her to her leisure activities. I do not remember what the exact decision was, but I think it was two or three hours a week, doing an outing on weekends and accompanying her to her sport activity during the week. My daughter must have time for her activities; otherwise she would miss out on them, because I cannot go with her.
The assistants were let go from one day to another. My old mom has not stopped crying in fear of the next time my assistance will be re-assessed. My son did not take this very good, and I did not feel well at all.
3.3. Consequences for Children
He started refusing to go to school because… in a way, it became hard for him at school, sitting and worrying how dad is coping. What will happen at home? No, I will stay at home.
When I lost all those hours…it ended up with my daughter not bringing home friends to our house, because what if her mother needed her… like if her mother needed her for going to the toilet, like that. It would have been really embarrassing for her if she had friends over then.
I am that kind of sort. I don’t want my son to go somewhere if he can’t come home. I do need someone who can go with me to pick him up. Yes, it is these unplanned situations that happen. My son suddenly says he wants to go to town to meet his friends, and then he stays too long, and the bus has stopped going. Then there is not much I can do… It gives me stomach pain, I can tell you. I have no assistance in the evenings, so I can’t go get him.
An example, he is invited to a birthday party by a friend from kindergarten. There is no solution to this situation. Just imagining, I would most probably not be able to go with him. If I need to go to the toilet, I can’t get into the toilet. It would be much simpler if my son could be accompanied by my assistant alone. But that is not allowed. I must always be present with the assistant. If I need someone to go with my son, I have to apply to social services who will find someone that my son has never met and will not feel safe with, just to go to a party with his friends. I find this very odd.
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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Berggren, U.J.; Bergman, A.-S. Whether Disabled Parents Receive Personal Assistance for Parenting and the Consequences for Children—An Interview Study. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2022, 19, 3330. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19063330
Berggren UJ, Bergman A-S. Whether Disabled Parents Receive Personal Assistance for Parenting and the Consequences for Children—An Interview Study. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2022; 19(6):3330. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19063330
Chicago/Turabian StyleBerggren, Ulrika Järkestig, and Ann-Sofie Bergman. 2022. "Whether Disabled Parents Receive Personal Assistance for Parenting and the Consequences for Children—An Interview Study" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 19, no. 6: 3330. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19063330
APA StyleBerggren, U. J., & Bergman, A. -S. (2022). Whether Disabled Parents Receive Personal Assistance for Parenting and the Consequences for Children—An Interview Study. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 19(6), 3330. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19063330