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(Stroke. 2005;36:2436.)
© 2005 American Heart Association, Inc.
Original Contributions |
From the Rehabilitation Center De Hoogstraat and Rudolf Magnus Institute of Neuroscience (A.V.-M., M.P., I.v.d.P., E.L.), University Medical Center, Utrecht; Institute for Rehabilitation Research (M.P.), Hoensbroek; Department of Education (A.M.M.), University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam; and Department of Methodology and Statistics (C.M.), Utrecht University, The Netherlands.
Correspondence to Anne Visser-Meily, MD, Rehabilitation Center De Hoogstraat, Rembrandtkade 10, 3583 TM Utrecht, The Netherlands. E-mail a.visser{at}dehoogstraat.nl
| Abstract |
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Methods Interviews with 82 children (4 to 18 years of age) and their parents (n=55) shortly after admission to a rehabilitation center, 2 months after discharge from inpatient rehabilitation, and 1 year after stroke. Depression was assessed using the Children Depression Inventory, behavioral problems with the Child Behavior Check List, and health status with the Functional Status II. Potential predictors were gender and age (child), activities of daily living disability and communication ability (patient), and spouses depression and perception of the marital relationship.
Results At the start of the stroke patients rehabilitation, 54% of the children had
1 subclinical or clinical problems, which improved to 29% 1 year after stroke. Childrens functioning 1 year after stroke could best be predicted by their functioning at the start of rehabilitation. Spouse depression and perception of marital relationship were also significant predictors. A total of 28% to 58% of the variance in childrens functioning could be explained.
Conclusions Childrens functioning after parental stroke improved during the first year after stroke. Identifying children at risk for problems 1 year after stroke requires assessment of childrens functioning and the healthy spouses depressive symptoms and perception of the marital relationship at the start of rehabilitation. This demonstrates the need for a family-centered approach in stroke rehabilitation.
Key Words: family health longitudinal studies stroke
| Introduction |
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A recent cross-sectional study5 showed that half the children of stroke patients reported behavioral problems or depressive feelings at the start of inpatient rehabilitation. Significant relations were found between these symptoms and the spouses burden and depression, whereas relations with measures of physical, cognitive, and communication disabilities of the stroke patient were insignificant.
No longitudinal follow-up or prognostic study of the impact of stroke on young children has been published to date. Prospective studies are necessary for revealing changes in childrens functioning and predictors of childrens long-term functioning after parental stroke. Early identification of children at risk for depressive, behavioral, or health problems and knowledge of relevant predictors might enable professionals to provide effective support to children and their families.
Therefore, the aim of this study was to answer the following research questions: (1) what is the course of childrens functioning (depression, behavior problems, and health status) during the first year after parental stroke; and (2) which factors, measured at the start of inpatient rehabilitation, can predict childrens functioning at 1 year after stroke?
| Methods |
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A total of 338 patients were included in the FuPro study, of whom 68% had a spouse. Of these spouses, 211 (92%) participated in the present study. Fifty-nine couples had young children. Three families refused to participate with their children, and 1 family received professional help for their childs behavioral problems before the stroke. A total of 82 children of 55 families participated in the first assessment (T1), of whom 77 also participated in the second (T2) and 71 in the third assessment (T3). Seven children were excluded because their parents were excluded from the FuPro study because of recurrent stroke (4x) or divorce (3x), and 4 children refused additional participation.
Procedure
At the start of inpatient rehabilitation, patients, spouses, and children were invited by their rehabilitation specialists to participate in the study. The first assessment was conducted as soon as possible after informed consent had been given. Spouses and children individually completed a series of pencil-and-paper questionnaires in a face-to-face interview. For children aged 4 to 7 years, we used parent-report measures only. The same researcher interviewed all of the spouses and children at home &2 months after the patients had been discharged from the rehabilitation center (second assessment) and 1 year after stroke (third assessment). The medical ethics committees of the University Medical Centre Utrecht and the participating rehabilitation centers approved the study, and informed consent was obtained from all of the participating patients, spouses, and children.
Measures
Behavior problems of the child were assessed using the Child Behavior Check List (CBCL),7 a parent-report measure for children aged 4 to 18 years. Items were summed to obtain scores for internalizing symptoms (ie, withdrawn somatic complaints and anxiety/depression) and externalizing symptoms (ie, delinquent and aggressive behavior). Raw scores were transformed into T scores that are standardized for gender and age. Cutoff scores of T values were used to mark behavior as "clinical," indicating a need for professional help (
64); "subclinical," indicating considerable problems just outside the clinical range, 60 to 63; and "normal" (
59).7 Depression was measured using the Child Depression Inventory (CDI).8 The CDI is a 27-item child self-report measure for children aged 8 to 18 years. A total score of
20 indicates clinical depression, and scores between 13 and 19 indicate subclinical depression.8 We used the 14-item parent-report version of the Functional Status (FS-II)9 to assess the childs health status. The FS-II was developed for children aged 0 to 16 years and consists of 14 items, like fatigue, sleep disturbance, energy, and intractable behavior. The FS-II score has a range of 0 to 100; a higher score indicates better health status.
Independent Variables
Patient data on age, gender, type of stroke, hemisphere involved, and length of stay at the rehabilitation center were obtained from medical records. Demographic variables of the spouse and the child were documented at the first assessment.
Stroke Patients
Disability was assessed using the BI.10 The ability to communicate was rated on a scale from 1 (no communication possible) to 5 (normal communication), based on the Utrecht Communication Observation (UCO).11 The BI and the UCO score were assessed at admission and at 1 year after stroke.
Spouses
Depression was measured using the Goldberg Depression Scale (GDS).12 This consists of 9 questions with yes or no answers. A total score of
2 indicates a clinically important disturbance.13 The perception of marital relationship between the spouse and patient was assessed using the 17-item Interactional Problem Solving Inventory (IPSI).14 The IPSI has a total score range of 17 to 85, with a higher score indicating more harmony. The GDS and IPSI were assessed at all 3 of the measurements.
Statistical Analysis
The research questions were answered using multilevel analysis, also named hierarchical linear modeling.15 This is a type of regression analysis that is suitable for longitudinal data with a hierarchical nature (measurements within children, children within families, and families within rehabilitation centers), because it corrects for the violation of independence assumption of normal (nonhierarchical) regression analysis. The numbers of observations per individual may vary. Similar to ordinary linear regression, a regression equation is obtained. For each predictor, a regression coefficient B is estimated and tested for significance, and the amount of explained variance by all of the predictors together is computed. To identify differences between T1 and T2 and T2 and T3 (the first research question), the outcome variables were related to time, which was entered into the analyses as a categorical predictor variable, that is, converted into dummy variables with the second measurement as a reference (dummy T1T2: T1=1, T2=0, and T3=0; dummy T2T3: T1=0, T2=0, and T3=1). To answer the second question of the prediction of childrens functioning at 1 year after stroke, all of the children who performed T3 measurements were included. The number of families (n=55) and children (n=82) included in this study allowed for a maximum of 6 independent variables in the analyses. Variables were chosen that were most relevant in earlier cross-sectional analyses.5 Independent variables were age and gender (child), BI and UCO (patient), and GDS and IPSI (spouse). All 4 of the outcome variables at T3 were analyzed twice: with the outcome variable measured at T1 as predictor (to correct outcome differences for baseline differences) and without. Because it is not common practice to assess or screen children of stroke patients, analyses without the assessment of childrens functioning are more useful in practice. A backward elimination technique was used to filter significant main relationships (P
0.05). The analyses were performed using MlwiN.16
| Results |
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Changes Over Time
At the first assessment, 54% of all children showed
1 behavior problem or depression, and, for 21%, these scores were within the clinical range. Thirty percent showed internalizing symptoms, 18% showed externalizing symptoms, and 13% showed depressive symptoms (Table 2). At the second and third assessment, the proportion of children with
1 of these problems was 23% (12% clinical range) and 29% (20% clinical range), respectively. Between T1 and T2, the internalizing behavioral problems, depression, and health status scores improved (P<0.001). Between T2 and T3, we did not find significant differences, but the percentage of children with subclinical or clinical scores on depression and internalizing behavior problems increased, and there was a decreasing trend in health status (P=0.06). Externalizing problem behavior did not change significantly between T1 and T2 or between T2 and T3.
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Stroke patients improved significantly on the BI and UCO score between T1 and T3. The spouses depressive symptoms decreased significantly between T1 and T2, but not between T2 and T3 (Table 2). Spouse perception of the marital relationship did not change between T1 and T2 but decreased significantly between T2 and T3.
Predictive Models
Internalizing problem behavior and spouse depression at T1 were significant predictors of internalizing problem behavior at T3 (47% explained variance; Table 3a). Externalizing problem behavior and age at T1 predicted externalizing problem behavior at T3 (40% explained variance). Childrens depression at T3 was predicted by childrens depression, gender, and BI of the parent with stroke at T1 (58% explained variance). Health status at T3 was predicted by health status, spouse depression, and spouse perception of marital relationship at T1 (28% explained variance). The same analyses without the T1 child-functioning scores revealed that depression of the healthy parent at T1 was a significant predictor of all of the outcome scores (Table 3b). The spouses perception of the marital relationship was a significant predictor for childrens health status and internalizing problem behavior. The explained variance was between 19% and 22%.
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| Discussion |
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The second aim of the study was to examine predictors for childrens functioning 1 year after stroke at the start of the rehabilitation. Childrens functioning at T1 was the most important predictor of functioning at T3. This result may suggest an enduring impact of parental stroke on a childs functioning. The predictive power (amount of explained variance) of the models including childrens functioning at T1 was considerable and much larger than that of the models without this information. Identification of children at risk for long-term problems is, therefore, best done by screening children for these problems in the early phase of stroke. Ensuring that these children obtain information about the consequences of stroke and its impact on the family and advice about how to deal with their feelings might support the adjustment process. At a later stage, children with persisting adjustment problems can be given professional help if needed.
Without the childrens functioning scores at T1, depression of the healthy parent was clearly the most important early predictor of childrens adjustment. Other authors also found a negative relation between parental depression and CBCL scores.18,19 Vandervalk et al.20 found a similar negative relation between quality of the marital relationship and childrens emotional adjustment. Like others,1,2 we found some indications that individual child characteristics (age and gender) moderate the impact of parental illness. The seriousness of the stroke appears to be of minor importance.
Our study has several limitations. First, our sample size was small. A larger study is, therefore, needed to confirm our results and to allow more variables (like being the oldest child, having siblings, and parental loss of income) to be entered in the multivariate analyses. Second, we only included children who lived in 2-parent families with a parent who had been selected for inpatient rehabilitation and who was moderately disabled. This limits the generalizability of our results. However, this is the first longitudinal study on this topic and, because it might have implications for practical care, additional research is merited.
Based on our findings, we advise a family-centered approach in stroke care in which attention should be given to childrens adjustment. Support programs for the whole family21,22 are available, and their effects on childrens functioning should be evaluated in future research.
| Acknowledgments |
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Received June 26, 2005; revision received August 6, 2005; accepted August 16, 2005.
| References |
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