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Perceived vulnerability: a comparison of parents and childrenWellesley College, Wellesley, MA, USA, tgleason{at}wellesley.edu
Wellesley College, Wellesley, MA, USA This study examined the agreement between parents and childrens perceptions of childrens vulnerability to illness. While extreme perceptions of vulnerability, such as vulnerable child syndrome, are described as disorders of the parent-child relationship, childrens health-related cognitions have not been examined as part of this process. The self-perceptions of health of 47 pre-school-aged children and their parents were evaluated through an interview and a survey respectively. Risk factors for vulnerable child syndrome predicted elevated perceptions of vulnerability for parents but not for children. Agreement on the childs level of vulnerability to illness was high, except that only one-third of the children whose parents classified them as more vulnerable relative to their peers classified themselves in this way. The results suggest that childrens perceptions of their health status should be incorporated into therapeutic work with families in which children are perceived as medically vulnerable.
Key Words: childrens perceptions parent-child relationship parents perceptions vulnerable child syndrome
Journal of Child Health Care, Vol. 8, No. 4,
279-287 (2004) |
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