The Impact of Health and Social Services on the Quality of Life in Families of Adults with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD): A Focus Group Study
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Design
2.2. Participants
2.3. Procedure
2.4. Data Collection and Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Focus Group
3.1.1. Well-Being
- Emotional Well-being
[…] We need to be considered as an endangered species, like pandas. We need to be protected. We need protection. When you start a new path, no one has to question it, it has to be supported, it cannot be uncertain so that I don’t know what happens tomorrow […] Because we families have invested in it, not only in economic terms, but also in terms of my own and my son’s life project.
[…] how many neuropsychiatrists have we changed in the last few years? Maybe three? […] and we are dealing with a service that should care for adults with disabilities. It is not possible to have to bear this discontinuity.
[Talking about school] […] we have changed two hundred million assistants, for one reason or another they disappeared.
- 2.
- Physical and Material Well-being
[Talking about behavioral educational interventions] For these things, we spend a lot of money, a lot of time, a lot of energy.
3.1.2. Independence
- Self-determination and Personal Development
[Talking about the parent’s self-organization in the Cooperative] There are so many who are looking at us with interest, hoping that we succeed because if it turns out that parents are able to self-organize, they can rely on us and help us in this empowerment process.
[Speaking about the Cooperative] What if this becomes a model that works. Small cafés can be installed in hotels, in small restaurants, in technical schools so that there can be people [with autism] who can be employed. They have fun with the carpentry workshops. Can you imagine how many situations you could create inside the neighbourhoods? However, this stuff works if it’s a widespread phenomenon.
3.1.3. Social Participation
- Interpersonal Relations
[…] We are demonstrating that when we act as a group, we are a cheerful company, we enjoy working together and we manage to build around us some consensus.
- 2.
- Social Inclusion
3.1.4. Rights
[Related to a sports program] He had to change his clothes between the bushes. Don’t make me say more….
[…] Do I have a right to ride the bus or not?
3.1.5. Linkages among QoL Domains
[…]We are here suffering, when no one is providing for our children, we try to fill the gap and create a stable care path for them.
[…]What is the result? That you as a family are alone in front of the institutions and therefore you succumb.
[Talking about the need of support by institution for parents’ self-initiatives]So I hope and dream of a time when the local health authorities present a call for children with autism to self-organize through cooperation.”
3.2. Service Survey Questionnaire
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Factor | Domain a | Indicators b |
---|---|---|
Well-being | Emotional well-being | Contentment, self-concept, lack of stress, safety, stable and predictable environments, positive feedback |
Physical well-being | Health and health care, mobility, wellness, nutrition, activities of daily living, leisure | |
Material well-being | Financial status/possessions, employment, ownership, housing | |
Independence | Personal development | Education and habilitation, personal competence, performance, purposive activities, assistive technology |
Self-determination | Autonomy/personal control, decisions, personal goals and values, choices | |
Social participation | Interpersonal relations | Interactions, relationships and supports; affiliations, affection, intimacy, friendships |
Social inclusion | Community integration and participation, community roles, social/natural supports, integrated environments | |
Rights | Human (respect, dignity, equality) and legal (citizenship, access/barrier-free environments, due process, privacy, ownership) |
Questions | % of Parents Agreeing with a Specific Option |
---|---|
What are the positive aspects of your Local Healthcare Authority? | 100% Few or none |
What are the negative aspects of your Local Healthcare Authority? | 62.5% Extended waiting times; 75% Unclear communication; 87.5% Poor service offer; 75.0% Disorganization of the service; 62.5% Difficulty in accessing services; 75.0% Poor involvement and participation in decisions related to your child |
What are the reasons for approaching your Local Healthcare Authority services? | 87.5% Certifications/bureaucratic issues |
Which of your Local Healthcare Authority services would you like to see implemented/improved? | 62.5% Projects for independent living/cohousing/protected apartments; 75% Family support; 87.5% Job placement paths |
Overall satisfaction for your experience with healthcare authority in the last 12 months (Likert 1–10 from ‘bad experience” to “great experience”) | 73% Low satisfaction |
What are the reasons for approaching your Town Hall services? | 62.5% Recreational and sports projects and workshops |
Overall satisfaction of your Town Hall authority (Likert 1–10 from “bad experience” to “great experience”) | 75% Low satisfaction |
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Correale, C.; Borgi, M.; Cirulli, F.; Laghi, F.; Trimarco, B.; Ferraro, M.; Venerosi, A. The Impact of Health and Social Services on the Quality of Life in Families of Adults with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD): A Focus Group Study. Brain Sci. 2022, 12, 177. https://doi.org/10.3390/brainsci12020177
Correale C, Borgi M, Cirulli F, Laghi F, Trimarco B, Ferraro M, Venerosi A. The Impact of Health and Social Services on the Quality of Life in Families of Adults with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD): A Focus Group Study. Brain Sciences. 2022; 12(2):177. https://doi.org/10.3390/brainsci12020177
Chicago/Turabian StyleCorreale, Cinzia, Marta Borgi, Francesca Cirulli, Fiorenzo Laghi, Barbara Trimarco, Maurizio Ferraro, and Aldina Venerosi. 2022. "The Impact of Health and Social Services on the Quality of Life in Families of Adults with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD): A Focus Group Study" Brain Sciences 12, no. 2: 177. https://doi.org/10.3390/brainsci12020177
APA StyleCorreale, C., Borgi, M., Cirulli, F., Laghi, F., Trimarco, B., Ferraro, M., & Venerosi, A. (2022). The Impact of Health and Social Services on the Quality of Life in Families of Adults with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD): A Focus Group Study. Brain Sciences, 12(2), 177. https://doi.org/10.3390/brainsci12020177