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The family's functioning with chronic illness in the mother: The spouse's perspective

Frances Marcus Lewis, Nancy Fugate Woods, Edythe Ellison Hough and Lillian Southwick Bensley

Social Science & Medicine, 1989, vol. 29, issue 11, 1261-1269

Abstract: While previous research has studied the impact of chronic illness on the patient or spouse, the impact on the marriage, the child, the parent-child relationship, and the family's functioning have been relatively ignored. To date there is no known study of the impact of a mother's chronic illness on the family. The purpose of the current exploratory study was to test a set of interrelated hypotheses about family functioning with the mother's chronic illness from the spouse's perspective based on a family systems perspective. Data were obtained from standardized questionnaires from 48 fathers with young school-age children whose wife had either breast cancer, diabetes, or fibrocystic breast disease. Results of a path analysis revealed that the number of illness demands the father experienced was a significant predictor of his level of depression. More demands resulted in higher depression scores. Marital adjustment was significantly affected by both the father's level of depression as well as by his wife's type of disease. Spouses of women with breast cancer had significantly higher levels of marital adjustment than did partners of the other women. More depressed spouses had lower levels of marital adjustment. Both illness demands and level of marital adjustment significantly predicted the type of coping behavior the family used. More frequent illness demands and higher levels of marital adjustment were associated with familial introspection, that is, coping behavior characterized by frequent feedback, reflection, and discussion in the family. The quality of the father-child relationship was significantly affected by this type of coping behavior. Families characterized as introspective had fathers who reported more frequent interchange with their children. This frequent exchange, as well as higher levels of marital adjustment, significantly affected the child's level of psychosocial functioning. Finally, higher levels of marital adjustment and more frequent exchange between the father and child positively affected the family's level of psychosocial functioning.

Date: 1989
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