"Many women struggle to deal with stress associated with having a child
with autism, but new research suggests that fathers can play a big role
in boosting moms’ mental health." Autism is sometimes, though by no means always, associated with Moebius Syndrome. So read on and see how:
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Many women struggle to deal with stress associated with having a
child with autism, but new research suggests that fathers can play a big
role in boosting moms’ mental health.
The extent that dads take a hands-on role in caregiving when children
are young is directly tied to the level of depressive symptoms mothers
experienced later, according to a study published in the Maternal and Child Health Journal.
The findings come from an analysis of data on more than 3,500
children — some of whom had autism or other disabilities — collected
through the National Center for Education Statistics’ Early Childhood
Longitudinal Study-Birth Cohort.
Researchers assessed the well-being of the children’s mothers and
examined fathers’ involvement in various everyday activities like play
and bathing. The study looked exclusively at families where children
lived with both biological parents for the first four years of life.
Among 9-month-olds later diagnosed with autism, the study found that
increased involvement of dads in activities like reading to their child
or soothing them when they were upset led to fewer depressive symptoms
in moms by the time the children reached age 4.
“In family systems that include children with autism, the stressors
are huge, and mothers need all the support they can grasp,” said Brent
McBride, a professor of human development at the University of Illinois
at Urbana–Champaign who co-authored the study. “We, as a society, have
to ask men to become involved, and it’s very important that men fully
understand the reasons why their support and active engagement in
parenting is so critical for the family’s functioning and for the
child.”
Previous research has suggested that mothers of children with autism
experience greater levels of stress, depression and anxiety.
McBride said the current findings indicate that professionals should
work more carefully with families who have a child on the spectrum to
increase involvement from fathers in parenting activities.
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