Parenting Stress and Physical Abuse Against Children with Disabilities
Abstract
Children with disabilities often experience physical violence committed by caregivers.
This study aims to identify the relationship between stress in caring for physical
violence committed against children with disabilities. The study used a cross-sectional
design to examine 76 parents with children with disabilities selected by convenience
sampling techniques. Of the 76 participants, 35 (46.1%) parents physically abused
children with disabilities. The most common type of violence is hitting (74.3%).
Parenting stress may be felt by parents because there is a relationship between
caregiving stress with physical violence (Z = -2.85; p-value = 0.004). Lack of access to
information related to adaptive care makes parents in Indonesia still consider physical
violence, such as hitting children, is a natural thing. The research concludes that there
is a relationship between parental stress and physical violence against children with
disabilities. Health workers are expected to be able to teach parents how to improve
coping mechanisms to reduce parenting stress so that parenting behaviour becomes
adaptive.
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- LSP-Jurnal Ilmiah Dosen [7301]