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Predictors of Psychosocial and Cognitive Adaptation in Children with Sickle Cell Syndromes
Authors:Danielle Devine  Ronald T. Brown  Richard Lambert  Joan E. Donegan  James Eckman
Affiliation:(1) Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Emory University School of Medicine, USA;(2) Department of Pediatrics, Division of Child Development, Children's Hospital, Charleston, Medical University of South Carolina, South Carolina, 29425;(3) University of North Carolina at Charlotte, USA;(4) Emory University School of Medicine, USA;(5) Departments of Medicine and Pediatrics, USA
Abstract:Examined the role of socioecological factors (family functioning and socioeconomic variables) in predicting behavioral and cognitive adaptation in children with sickle cell syndromes (SCD). Participants included 74 African American children and adolescents with SCD and their primary caretakers. Outcomes included internalizing and externalizing behavior symptoms, as rated by caretakers, as well as intellectual abilities and academic achievement, as assessed by individually administered standardized instruments. Family functioning consisted of both caretaker adjustment and family environment (i.e., family adaptability and cohesion). Hierarchical multiple regression analyses revealed that caretaker psychological adjustment predicted externalizing behaviors, while family environment (i.e., adaptability and cohesion) predicted neither behavioral nor cognitive functioning. Socioeconomic variables alone predicted intellectual abilities and academic achievement and also contributed to the prediction of child behavioral adaptation. Results are discussed in terms of relevant sociocultural issues and implications for family-level prevention and intervention.
Keywords:sickle cell disease  ethnicity  ethnic minorities  pain  pediatrics  children
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