Parents with disabilities
Parents with disabilities are those who are raising children and have disorders in a certain aspect for example mental, physical and so on. There is more accurate classification of different types of disabilities, basing on disabled parents’ physical and mental condition. Disability brings various problems to parents themselves, their children and the whole family. Researchers has been discussing the effects and issued raised by disabled parents. Aiming at helping parents with disabilities, organizations and governments have delivered relevant strategies to provide support.The term ‘disability’ states the existence of one or more restrictions either in any core activities including self-care, mobility and communication, or in employment. And the presence of the specific restrictions needs to be highly possible to last or has been lasted for 6 months or longer to be considered as disability.
Classification of disabilities and issues
Disability includes a range of distinctive disorders varying in type of condition and degree of severity. There are considerable issues which varies depending on families’ life stage and types of impairment challenging the families with disabled parents.Physical disability is the relatively more commonly occurring one. The data states that among the children living with a disabled parent, 91% of them have a physically disabled parent while 11% have a parent with mental or behavioral disabilities.
Physically disabled parents
“Physical condition includes cancers, endocrine diseases, diseases of the nervous system, eye, ear, circulatory system, respiratory system, digestive system and musculoskeletal system, congenital disorders, injuries and other physical conditions. ” For a long time, large number of research of physically disabled parents is based on negative hypothesis and recommended conclusions. The parents with physical or sensory disabilities also bear misinterpretation of their parenting abilities, which brings significant hurdle when they attempt to build and maintain families.Deaf parents
Deaf parents face communication barrier which lead to the limitation in participating in social network. Visually impaired parents face difficulties in insuring the safe environment surrounding both their children and themselves, as well as the restriction in capable activities for them to take part in with their children.Visually impaired parents
Visually impaired parents face difficulties in insuring the safe environment surrounding both their children and themselves, as well as the restriction in capable activities for them to take part in with their children.Mobility difficulties
Mobility difficulties make parents rely on others or certain equipment like wheelchair to support them. More energy and longer time are required for them to move from one place to another.Chronic pain
Chronic pain causes stress and makes parents become less patient with their children in daily life. And more rest is needed, which limits the time allocated for parenting. The side effect caused by pain relief and other necessary medicines including possible addiction is another challenge faced by this kind of parents.Mentally disabled parents
“Mental or behavioral disorder includes psychoses, neuroses, intellectual and developmental disorders, and other mental or behavioral disorders. ”Intellectual disabilities
Parents with intellectual disabilities face great discrimination when they try to maintain their families. They have difficulties at managing housing and financial issues because of their socio-economic disadvantage, which may lead to the result of having a debt. As their children grow up and have knowledge that is superior to parents’, new challenges like providing children with assistance on education and other kind of guidance come up. A 2018 systematic review found low quality evidence that some parents, mainly mothers with intellectual disabilities, provided effective parenting when provided training and support for the required skills.Learning difficulties
Parents with leaning difficulties need help to process information and manage objectives. The way in which they gain and understand information is different from normal parents, which puts them under social criticism and stigma.Young carer
The term ‘young carer’ means children who participate in taking care of their parents in life.Types of caring activities provided by children
- Direct care for parents, including assist in parents’ mobility and other personal cares like toileting, eating, communicating, showering and dressing. Among these assist in mobility is the most common direct assistance provided by young carers.
- General household tasks, for example laundry, cooking, gardening and simple repairing works. Children participating in this form of assist occupy a greater portion than those helping with direct personal care.
- Financial management like helping with money and bills, even work to earn for living expense.
Age and identification
Comparing to children in young age, more children in high school age are taking the responsibility of caring for their disabled parents, which reflects that whether higher-aged children are more possible to have disabled parents or children of higher age are more often asked to provide their parents with assistance thanks to their higher-levelled capacity.According to the data resulted from the research, the local disabled parents in Leicester and Leicestershire of UK are less likely to identify children aged between 12 and 19 as young carers. This fact illustrates that rather than what children virtually do parents rely more on broader social relations within the family when they consider whether their children should be defined as ‘young carers’. Whereas doctors depend on how much burden a child take in caring to identify young carers.
School teachers play crucial role in identifying young carers in early age and offering help. The young carers identified by teachers are in averagely younger age than those identified by doctors, which makes it important for primary teaching institutions especially to identify young carers.
Why children become young carers
Participants from a Young Carers workshop held in Wellington, New Zealand in 2005 indicated that New Zealand children and young people become young carers mainly because of cultural expectations, nature of disability, awareness and acceptance of services, and other reasons relating to the family unit like no one else is taking the responsibility.Impacts on young carers
Negative
When young carers are not supported, negative outcomes will apply. These consequences involving both young carers’ social and personal life.- Children's academic achievement is negatively impacted due to the time they spend on doing caring activities for disabled parents. Young carers’ academic outcomes are below their peers and boys are effected more severely than girls.
- Further study impacted. The number of young carers who want to continue studying in university is fewer than normal students, whether because of financial difficulties or need of time for caring.
- Young carers are afraid of being seen differently. They feel anxious and worried.
Positive
- More mature than peers, greater sense of responsibility. They feel proud and happy to be able to care for families.
Support towards young carers
Effects on children
About negative effects
The lack of relative research in this area leads to the prejudice that disabled parents bring negative effect, which is inaccurate. As high-quality studies state, the sources of problems happening in parenting with disability is the same as that in non-disabled parenting, which include parents' former experience of being abused physically, sexual, or on substance, poverty, lack of appropriate support and so on. The disability in parenting alone, is not the cause of negative impact to children.It is widely considered that children's participation in education will be negatively influenced by their parents’ disability. 1998 Survey of Disability, Aging and Carers provided broad data showing this kind of impact is relatively low by comparing the number of children participating school from families with and without disabled parents. However the data does show that the existence of disabled parents will negatively influence further education.
About positive effects
Little difference is found between the household tasks done by children with or without disabled parents. And life details of children with disabled parents like the number of friend and activities they do with parents are almost same with those of children with normal parents.Children who have parents with disabilities even have an “average to better-than-average” development. Children from the family with disabled parents are more skilled at solving problem, more compassionate, more respectful towards disabilities and differences, more sensitive about justice and more independent. Parents with intellectual disability always have a strong and warm family bonds with their children, even when some children were removed by welfare system. And most children of disabled parents regard their childhood as happy memory.
Researchers at Israel's Bar Ilan University has delivered a study and the result shows that children who have parents with sensory impairment are more empathic and shows higher awareness of emotions of others than other children from normal families. Other advantages of children with disabled parents like greater maturity, higher sensitivity and more abundant life experience were also reported by earlier research.
The needed support
How supports need to be
- Specialized support. Except for the universal needs of income, housing, access to leisure activities and other informal supports which are demanded by both disabled and non-disabled parents, parents with disabilities requires more specialized supports regarding to different conditions of their impairment.
- In-time support. Instead of being provided when children have been in an urgent need of help, the support towards families with disabled parents is ideally supposed to be available throughout the whole parenting process from preparation of parenthood.
- Flexible support. Depending on different stages of children's maturity and alterations in parents’ health condition, the support needed varies. And the family as a whole and other non-disabled members of the family should also be taken into account when the assistant is offered.
- Respect privacy. Not all parents with disabilities want their children or other family members to participate in the discussion about their disability when support is offered.
Types of needed support