Parents of grown kids with autism ‘more likely to divorce’
August 4th, 2010 - 1:53 pm ICT by ANIWashington, August 04 (ANI): A new data from a large longitudinal study of families of adolescents and adults with autism has found that the parents of grown children with autism are more likely to divorce than couples with typically developing children.
The study is the first to track marital history of parents of adult children with autism.
The study compared the marital fates of 391 couples - the parents of adolescent and adult children with autism - to a sample drawn from another large longitudinal study, the National Survey of Midlife in the United States (MIDUS).
The goal of the study was to document the rate and timing of divorce of parents of children with autism, explains Sigan Hartley, a UW-Madison assistant professor of human development and family studies and lead author of the report.
The study revealed that the divorce rate for parents of children with autism mirrors the divorce rate of the parents of children without disabilities until the child reaches 8 years of age. After that, the divorce rate goes down for parents of children without disabilities but remains high for parents of children with autism.
“There seems to be a prolonged vulnerability for divorce in parents of children with autism,” says Hartley.
“Typically, if couples can survive the early child-rearing years, parenting demands decrease and there is often less strain on the marriage. However, parents of children with autism often continue to live with and experience high parenting demands into their child’s adulthood, and thus marital strain may remain high in these later years.”
The study has been published in the August issue of the Journal of Family Psychology by researchers from the University of Wisconsin-Madison’s Waisman Center. (ANI)
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Tags: 8 years, adolescent, adolescents, adult children, adulthood, adults with autism, assistant professor, child rearing, children with autism, divorce rate, family psychology, fates, longitudinal study, marital history, midlife, national survey, university of wisconsin madison, uw madison, vulnerability, waisman center