Cuban Mothers' Schemas of ADHD: Development, Characteristics, and Help Seeking Behavior |
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Authors: | Emily Arcia María C. Fernández |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC;(2) Mailman Center for Child Development, University of Miami, Miami, FL, 33101;(3) Mailman Center for Child Development, University of Miami, Miami, FL |
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Abstract: | Parents play a crucial role in the diagnosis and treatment of Attention-Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD), one of the most prevalent developmental disorders of young children We report the findings of a qualitative study of Cuban-American mothers of 7 to 10 year old children with ADHD. Results suggest that mothers lacked a cultural model for ADHD and held a cultural model of normal child development which hampered their development of a schema of ADHD. Development of ADHD schemas were motivated by perplexity at their children's behavior and by the high value mothers ascribed to academic achievement. Although the schemas developed by the mothers were labeled as ADHD, their behavioral characterizations of their children, their attributions for the condition and for its causes, and their management strategies were not always in agreement with those of the biomedical model for the condition. However, once mothers classified their children's behavior as atypical, they actively sought assistance from the professional sector. |
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Keywords: | Cuban-American mothers ADHD schemas cultural models |
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