Psychological Resilience and Wellbeing in Adolescents Born Premature
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Slater, Erin Jayne
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Canberra, ACT : The Australian National University
Abstract
Children born preterm often experience poorer psychological
outcomes at each
developmental life stage compared to full-term peers. However,
this vulnerable population is
often considered remarkable for their resilience in the face of
adversity. To examine
difficulties in psychological wellbeing and establish possible
patterns of resilience with the
preterm population, this study uses data from the prospective
Longitudinal Study of
Australian Children (LSAC) to assess the association between
prematurity and the stability of
internalising problems from 10-11 to 14-15 years. The study
investigates the interacting
effects of gestational period, gender and parental warmth on the
stability of severity of
internalising problems following the transition to adolescence.
Data from 44 very preterm
(VPT), 195 moderate preterm (MPT) and 2851 term born adolescent
participants in the LSAC
was used. Gestational period was found to be predictive of
resilience, with durations less
than 32 weeks associated with increased internalising
difficulties during the transition to
adolescence compared to non-preterm and moderate preterm. Gender
moderated the
association between gestational age and increased internalising
problems with very preterm
female adolescents encountering the highest internalising
psychopathology and the greatest
magnitude of change between middle childhood and adolescence.
Parental warmth was not
predictive of stability of psychological wellbeing in preterm
respondents. These findings may
help inform early intervention practices for preterm populations
in boosting child coping
capacities and peer and parent support prior to adolescence, and
prompt further research into
the mechanisms driving the distinct pattern of psychological
resilience of females born very
prematurely.
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