AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how the genetic causes of childhood intellectual disability affect the mental health of parents, considering various risk and protective factors that influence parental well-being.
  • Researchers found that parents of children with intellectual disabilities reported higher emotional distress compared to the general UK population, linked to factors such as life events and perceived impacts of their children’s behavioral challenges.
  • Specific genetic diagnoses, particularly copy number variants (CNVs), were found to correlate with greater parental distress, suggesting that understanding these genetic influences could help provide better support for families and improve overall well-being.

Article Abstract

Background: Intellectual disability has a complex effect on the well-being of affected individuals and their families. Previous research has identified multiple risk and protective factors for parental mental health, including socioeconomic circumstances and child behaviour.

Aims: This study explored whether genetic cause of childhood intellectual disability contributes to parental well-being.

Method: Children from across the UK with intellectual disability due to diverse genetic causes were recruited to the IMAGINE-ID study. Primary carers completed the Development and Well-being Assessment, including a measure of parental distress (Everyday Feeling Questionnaire). Genetic diagnoses were broadly categorised into aneuploidy, chromosomal rearrangements, copy number variants (CNVs) and single nucleotide variants.

Results: Compared with the UK general population, IMAGINE-ID parents (n = 888) reported significantly elevated emotional distress (Cohen's d = 0.546). Within-sample variation was related to recent life events and the perceived impact of children's difficulties. Impact was predicted by child age, physical disability, autistic characteristics and other behavioural difficulties. Genetic diagnosis also predicted impact, indirectly influencing parental well-being. Specifically, CNVs were associated with higher impact, not explained by CNV inheritance, neighbourhood deprivation or family structure.

Conclusions: The mental health of parents caring for a child with intellectual disability is influenced by child and family factors, converging on parental appraisal of impact. We found that genetic aetiologies, broadly categorised, also influence impact and thereby family risks. Recognition of these risk factors could improve access to support for parents, reduce their long-term mental health needs and improve well-being of individuals with intellectual disability.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/bjp.2020.38DOI Listing

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