The Association between Parenting Stress, Positive Reappraisal Coping, and Quality of Life in Parents with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) Children: A Systematic Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Literature Search Strategy
2.2. Eligibility Criteria
2.3. Analytical Process
2.4. Study Selection
2.5. Quality Assessment
2.6. Data Extraction and Synthesis
3. Results
3.1. Search and Screening
3.2. Characteristics of the Research Included
3.3. Instruments for Measuring Main Constructs
3.3.1. Parenting Stress Measurement
3.3.2. Measurement of Positive Reappraisal Coping
3.3.3. Measurement of Quality of Life (QoL)
3.4. Evaluation of Quality
3.5. Parenting Stress and Factors Related to Parenting Stress
3.6. Association between Parenting Stress and Positive Reappraisal Coping
3.7. The Correlation between Parenting Stress and QoL of Parents with ASD Children
3.8. The Relationship between Parenting Stress, Positive Reappraisal Coping, and QoL
3.9. Factors That Influence Relationship between Parenting Stress, Positive Reappraisal Coping, and QoL
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Study | Confounding | Selection | Measurement of Intervention | Missing Data | Measurement of Outcomes | Reported Results | Overall |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Lee et al. (2004) | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low |
Ashworth et al. (2019) | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low |
Costa et al. (2017) | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low |
Begum et al. (2020) | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low |
Factor et al. (2017) | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low |
Hou (2018) | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low |
Kim et al. (2020) | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low |
Lu et al. (2018) | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low |
Mohakud (2019) | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low |
Pattini et al. (2019) | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low |
Rodriguez et al. (2019) | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low |
Siu et al. (2019) | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low |
Bohadana et al. (2019) | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low |
Tomeny (2017) | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low |
Lai et al. (2015) | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low |
Pisula and Kossakowska (2010) | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low |
Cappe et al. (2020) | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low |
Cappe et al. (2017) | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low |
Chu et al. (2020) | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low |
Hsiao et al. (2017) | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low |
Nuske et al. (2018) | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low |
Pisula and Dorman (2017) | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low |
Thullen and Bonsall (2017) | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low |
Hall and Graff (2012) | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low |
Ishtiaq et al. (2020) | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low |
Seymour et al. (2013) | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low |
Shepherd et al. (2018) | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low |
Dardas and Ahmad (2015) | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low |
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Study | Study Design | Country | Participant | N (Sample Size) Male/Female | Age of Parents/Mean | Age of Children/Mean | Diagnosis | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Ashworth et al. (2019) | Cross sectional study | England | Mother | 265 | Parents of children with WS (n = 107), DS (n = 79), and ASD (n = 79) | 4–25 years | WS (n = 107); DS (n = 79); ASD (n = 79) |
2 | Costa et al. (2017) | Cross sectional study | Germany | Mother and father | 78 ASD 37 (31/6); TD 41 (36/5) | ASD: 33–53 years (M = 41.29); TD: 26–49 years (M = 39.12) | ASD: 3–13 years (M = 9.27) TD: 4–13 years (M = 8.42) | ASD (n = 37) TD (n = 41) |
3 | Factor et al. (2017) | Cross sectional study | Virginia, US | Mother | 27 | 34–51 years (M = 39.10) | 7–12 (M = 8.88) | ASD |
4 | Hou (2018) | Cross sectional study | Taiwan | Mother | 102 | Mother with ASD children (M = 34.73); mother with DD children (M33.04) | ASD (M = 31.81 months), DD (M = 30.16 months) | ASD (n = 51) DD (n = 51) |
5 | Kim et al. (2020) | Cross sectional study | USA | Parents | 1131 = Hispanic n = 125 (M = 25(20.5), F = 97(79.5)); White n = 790 (M = 208 (26.6), (F = 574(73.4.)); Black n = 80; (M = 15 (19.2), F = 63(80.8)); Asian n = 48 (M = 25 (54.3), F = 21(45.76); multi race n = 88 (M = 21(24.4), F = 65(75.6)) | Hispanic (42.41), White 790(44.27), Black 80 (44.6), Asian 48 (44.30), multi race 88 (43.47) | Hispanic (M = 9.80), White (M = 11.61), Black (M = 10.64), Asian (M = 10.50), multi race (M = 10.64) | ASD |
6 | Lu et al. (2018) | Cross sectional study | China | Parents | 479 | 36.59 | 3–18 (6.68) | ASD |
7 | Pisula and Kossakowska (2010) | Cross sectional study | Poland | Mother and father | N = 202: parents with ADS children (49) and parents with TD children (52) | 26–47 years; parent with ASD children (Mother (39.56) Father (41.87)); parent with TD (mother (39.94), father (41.62) | 5–17 ASD (10.24), TD (10.21) | ASD (n = 26), TD (n = 29) |
8 | Mohakud (2019) | Cross sectional study | India | Mother | Mother of ASD children = 23; mother of CP children = 21 | 36–65 years | ASD (M = 4.6), CP (M = 3.7) | ASD (n = 23), CP (n = 21) |
9 | Pattini et al. (2019) | Cross sectional study | Italy | Mothers | N = 39: mother of TD children (n = 15); mother of ASD children (n = 15) | Mother of ASD children (M = 39.5); mother of TD children (M = 38.3) | 3–11 years; TD children n = 15(5.7), ASD children n = 15 (39.5) | ASD (n = 15), TD (n = 15) |
10 | Gong (2015) | Cross-sectional study | China | Parents | 196 | Fathers: 19–62 years (M = 37.08); Mothers: 25–50 years (M = 34.26) | 23–144 months (M = 77.73 months) | ASD |
11 | Rivard et al. (2014) | Cross sectional study | Canada | Mother and father | N = 236 (118 mothers and 118 fathers) | Not mentioned | 2.9–5 years-old (SD = 0.61) | ASD, Asperger’s syndrome, Pervasive Developmental Disorders-Non-Specified (PDD-NOS) |
12 | Rodriguez et al. (2019) | Cross sectional study | USA | Mother and father | 187 | Parents had an average age of 39.68 years; mothers (M = 38.7) and fathers (M = 40.7) | 5–12 years | ASD, intellectual disability |
13 | Siu et al. (2019) | Cross sectional study | Hongkong | Parents | N = 731 (177 parents of ASD children and 554 parent of TD children’s children) | 41.5 years old | 6–11 years (M = 8.4 years old for ASD, M = 8.6 years old for TD) | ASD (n = 177), TD (554). |
14 | Tomeny (2017) | Cross sectional study | USA | Mother/female caregivers | 111 | 31–60 years (M = 44.1) | 3–17 years (M = 11.98) | ASD (56% with ASD, 21% with Asperger’s Disorder, 23% with pervasive developmental disorder, not otherwise specified (PDD-NOS)) |
15 | Begum et al. (2020) | Cross sectional study | Bangladesh | Parent | 44 | Not mentioned | Not mentioned | ASD |
16 | Lai et al. (2015) | Cross sectional study | India | Parents | N = 136 (73 parent of ASD children, 63 parent of TD children) | 43.68 years; ASD n = 43 (46.10); AS n = 15 (46.00); PDD-NOS n = 15 (48.30); TD n = 63 (43.68) | ASD n = 43 (14.10); AS n = 15 (12.90); PDD-NOS n = 15 (13.25); TD n = 63 (10.80) | ASD, AS, PDD-NOS, TD |
17 | Cappe et al. (2020) | Cross sectional study | Canada | Parent | 87 | 28–56 years (M = 41.25) | 4.46 | ASD |
18 | Cappe et al. (2017) | Cross sectional study | Canada | Parent | 77 | 29–56 years (M = 40.49) | M = 9.62 years old (under 6 years 14.3%; 6–9 years 27.3%; 9–12 33.8%; over 12 years 24.7%) | ASD |
19 | Chu et al. (2020) | Cross sectional study | Malaysia | Parent | 110 | 31–40 years | 2–18 years | ASD |
20 | Hsiao et al. (2017) | Cross sectional study | USA | Parents | 236 | Not mentioned | <5 years (n = 29) 5–12 years (n = 150) 13–18 years (n = 63) >18 years (n = 24) | ASD |
21 | Nuske et al. (2018) | Cross sectional study | USA | Parents | 71 = (ASD n = 43, TD n = 28)) | Parent of ASD children = 40.89 years; parent of TD = 41.79 | ASD (24–59 months), TD (24–61 months) | ASD (n = 43), TD (n = 28) |
22 | Pisula and Dorman (2017) | Cross sectional study | Poland | Mothers and fathers | 202 (49 mother–father dyads; ASD), (parents of TD 52 mother–father dyads) | ASD parents = mother (39,56 years), father (41.87 years); TD parents = mother (39.94 years), father (41.62 years) | ASD children (10.24); TD children (10.21) | ASD (n = 49), TD (n = 52) |
23 | Thullen and Bonsall (2017) | Cross sectional study | Columbia | Parent | 113 | 29–64 years | 5–13 years | ASD |
24 | Hall and Graff (2012) | Cross sectional study | USA | Mother and father | 70 Mothers (n = 48) and father (n = 22) | 40 years | 3–21 years | ASD |
25 | Ishtiaq et al. (2020) | Cross sectional study | Pakistan | Mother and father | 300: n = 200 parents of HI and 100 parents of ASD children | 20–60 years (40.56) | Not mentioned | HI (n = 200) ASD (n = 100) |
26 | Seymour et al. (2013) | Cross sectional study | USA | Mothers | 65 | 36.09 years | 2–5 years | ASD |
27 | Shepherd et al. (2018) | Cross sectional study | New Zealand | Father and mother | 178 fathers (n = 19) and mothers (n = 159) | 29–60 or over years (M = 45.27) | Up to 9 years: n = 56 (35%); 10–19: n = 78 (49%); 20–29: n = 17 (11%); 30 or over: n = 7 (4%) | ASD |
28 | Bohadana et al. (2019) | Cross sectional study | Australia | Father and mother | 139 Fathers (n = 19) and mothers (n = 120) | Mother (M = 39.49); father (M = 35.16) | 6–12 years | ASD |
29 | Dardas and Ahmad (2015) | Cross sectional study | Jordan | Mother | 184 | 21–69 years (M = 37) | Under 12 years | ASD |
Measures | Description of the Tool | Reviewed Studies Using This Tool |
---|---|---|
Parenting Stress Instrument | ||
The Parenting Stress Index-Short Form (PSI-SF) | Used to evaluate a degree of parenting stress based on Abidin (1995). Consist of 12 items on a 5-point Likert scale from ‘strongly agree’ (1) to ‘strongly disagree’ (5). | Siu et al. (2019), Pattini et al. (2019), Lu et al. (2018), Hou, (2018), Gong, (2015), Bohadana et al. (2019), Rivard et al. (2014), Lai et al. (2015), Thullen and Bonsall, (2017), Hall and Graff, (2012), Dardas and Ahmad, (2015) |
The Genetic Syndromes Stressors Scale (GSSS) | Used to measure parental stressors relating to rare genetic disorders. Consist of 14 items on a Likert scale ranging from 0 (not at all stressful) to 3 (extremely stressful). | Ashworth et al. (2019) |
Family Resilience The 2016 NSCH | Used to measure the level of parenting stress and family resilience. Consist of 3 items with 4 response categories: (1) never, (2) rarely, (3) sometimes, and (4) usually or always. A higher score indicated higher parenting stress and higher levels of family resilience. | Kim et al. (2020) |
The Burden Interview | Used to measure the level of parenting stress. Consists of 29 items, rated on a four-point scale from 0 (not at all) to 3 (extremely). A higher score indicating greater levels of parenting stress. | Rodriguez et al. (2019) |
The Parental Stress Scale (PSS) | Used to assess the level of parenting stress caused by the parental task, circumstances, and difficulties. Consists of 18-item questionnaire. | Hsiao et al. (2017), Istihaq et al. (2020) |
Perceived Stress Scale (PRSS) | Used to measure an individual’s perception of their intensity of response for several daily stressful situations. Consists of 23 self-report questions. Each question contains a statement that describes a potentially stressful situation and three choices describing potential responses. | Mohakud, (2019); Factor et al. (2017) |
The Questionnaire on Resources and Stress–Short Form (QRS-F) | Used to assess self-report parental adaptation and coping related to raising a child with developmental delays, physical handicaps, or chronic illness. Consists of 52 items. | Tomeny, (2017) |
Heart Rate Variability (HRV) Index | Used to measure emotional responses throughout the autonomous nervous system. High resting HRV is thought to indicate readiness to respond to environmental demands and emotion regulation capacity. The high-frequency (HF, 0.15–0.40 Hz) component of these changes was designated as the most reliable indicator of HRV and lower values reflect less emotional regulation. | Costa et al. (2017) |
The Appraisal of Life Events Scale (ALES) | Used to assess the dimension of perceived stress (threat, loss, and challenge. Consisted of 16 items that rated on a 5-point Likert scale, ranging from 0 (“not at all”) to 5 (“Extremely”). The higher the score, the more parents perceive their situation as a threat, a loss, or a challenge. | Cappe et al. (2017) |
The short form of the Questionnaire of Resources and Stress for Families with Chronically Ill or Handicapped Members (QRS–S) | Used to measure three main areas of stress: child problems (18 items), personal problems (30 items), and family problems (18 items). For each of the 66 items, participants circle one of two responses: true/false. Higher scores indicate higher stress. | Pisula, and Dörsmann, (2017) |
The depression, anxiety, and stress scale-21 (DASS-21) | Used to assess the negative emotional states of depression, anxiety, and stress. Items rated on a 4-point scale ranging from 0 = “did not apply to me at all” to 3 = “applied to me very much, or most of the time”. | Seymour et al. (2013), Lai et al. (2015) |
Positive Reappraisal Coping Instrument | ||
A revised version of a coping checklist | Used to measure the coping strategies. Consists of eight groups: confrontive coping, distancing, self-controlling, seeking social support, accepting responsibility, escape avoidance, planful problem-solving, and positive reappraisal. For each group, participants were asked to rate the strategy using a four-point scale ranging from zero to three (0–3) (“do not use” to “use frequently”) | Begum et al. (2020) |
The Brief Coping Orientation of Problems Experienced (Brief-COPE) | Used to assess 14 differences coping strategies used by parents. Consists of 28 items. Items are rated on a four-point rating scale (i.e., from 1 = “I have not been doing this at all” to 4 = “I have been doing this a lot”. | Lai et al. (2015), Seymour et al. (2013); Shepherd et al. (2018); Dardas and Ahmad, (2015) |
Ways of Coping Questionnaire (Folkman and Lazarus 1988) | Used to measure coping strategies used by parents. Consists of 66 items. The items grouped into eight scales: confrontive coping, distancing, self-controlling, seeking social support, accepting responsibility, escape avoidance, planful problem-solving, and positive reappraisal. | Pisula and Kossakowska, (2010) |
The French version of the Ways of Coping Checklist (WCC-R) | Used to evaluate coping strategies of parents with PDD children. Consists of 27 items rated on a four-point scale (0 means “no” and 3 means “yes”). Scores ranged from 0 to 21. A higher score indicated that the respondent coped with stressful events by seeking assistance, information, advice, sympathy, or emotional support from others. | Cappe et al. (2017); Cappe et al. (2020) |
A short version of the Coping Strategies Inventory (CSI-SF) | Used to assess the level of stress and coping strategies used by parents with HI and ASD children. Consists of 16 items and 4 subscales: problem-focused engagement (PFE); problem-focused disengagement (PFD); emotion-focused engagement (EFE); emotion-focused disengagement (EFD). | Ishtiaq et al. (2020) |
Quality of Life (QoL) Instrument | ||
World Health Organization Quality of Life Assessment Questionnaire (WHOQOLBREF) | Used to measure the level of quality of life of parent. Latent variable composed of four subscales (physical, environmental, psychological, and social relationships). Consists of 26 items. The higher score indicates better quality of life. | Pisula and Dörsmann, (2017) |
The Family Quality of Life Scale (FQOL) | Used to assess parents’ perceived satisfaction with their quality of life. Consists of 25-item scale with 5 sub-scales (family interaction, emotional well-being, parenting, physical/material well-being, and disability-related support). The items are rated on a 5-point scale ranging from 1 (very dissatisfied) to 5 (very satisfied). A higher total score refers to a higher family QoL. | Hsiao et al. (2017) |
The CarerQol-7D scale | Used to assess a comprehensive description of the caregiving situation and parent’s well-being. Consists of five negative and two positive dimensions. The five negative dimensions include (i) relational problems, (ii) mental health problems, (iii) problems combining daily activities with care, (iv) financial problems, and (v) physical health problems. The two positive dimensions are (i) fulfillment from caregiving and (ii) support with lending care. | Chu et al. (2020) |
The Quality of Life in ASD Scale | Used to measure the parental perception of quality-of-life parents of children with ASD. Consists of 28 items on a 5-point Likert scale ranging from 1 (not very much) to 5 (very much). Higher scores indicate the better parent-reported quality of life. | Bohadana et al. (2019) |
The Pediatric Quality of Life (PedsQL) Inventory | Used to assess quality of life of parents in 4 domains: physical, social, emotional, and cognitive functioning. Consists of 20 items. Item is scored on a 5-point scale, ranging from 0 = never a problem to 4 = almost always a problem. Items are reversed scored and linearly transformed to a 0–100 scale as follows: 0 = 100; 1 = 75; 2 = 50; 3 = 25; 4 = 0. Higher scores indicate higher parent quality or life and family functioning. | Nuske et al. (2018) |
Author, Year | Variables of Interest | The General Approach to Analysis | Main Finding |
---|---|---|---|
Ashworth et al. (2019) | Parenting stress: rare genetic disorders parental stresses | One-way ANOVAs and Bonferroni post hoc analyses |
|
Costa et al. (2017) | The stress of parents: individual differences in HRV + capability for emotion control Well-being of parents: many facets of emotional problems | Independent sample t-tests |
|
Factor et al. (2017) | Parenting Stress: self-reports of stress (the increased support for stress in self-reports would indicate higher stress) | Pearson correlations |
|
Hou (2018) | Parenting stress: stress for parents having children under the age of 12 | Pearson’s correlation analyses |
|
Kim et al. (2020) | Parenting stress: three parenting stress items Family resilience: four family resilience items | ANOVA or chi-square tests |
|
Lu et al. (2018) | Parent stress: three factors (parenting difficulty, relationship between parent and child, and problematic children and parental stress) | Spearman correlation test |
|
Mohakud (2019) | Parenting Stress: perceived stress in mothers | Mann–Whitney U Test |
|
Gong (2015) | Parenting stress: assessing stress in parent–child relationships (both child and parent) | t-tests |
|
Pattini et al. (2019) | Stress: disorder related to the role of parenting coping strategies: several adaptive coping strategies | Shapiro–Wilk Test |
|
Rivard et al. (2014) | Parenting stress: the perceived stress of fathers and mothers with ASD children | t-tests and bivariate analyses, regression analyses |
|
Rodriguez et al. (2019) | Parenting stress: parental and childcare-related personal distress and difficulties Child behavior issues: children with ASD-level behavioral problems | Paired sample t-tests |
|
Siu et al. (2019) | Parenting stress: the stress level reported by the parent directly related to parenting based on personal circumstances | Bivariate correlations |
|
Tomeny (2017) | Parenting stress: parental adjustment and coping associated with raising children with developmental delays, physical disabilities, or chronic diseases | Zero-order correlation analyses |
|
Begum et al. (2020) | Coping: establish coping strategies based on problems and emotions | Chi-square test |
|
Lai et al. (2015) | Coping: the use of broad-based dysfunctional coping methods and adaptive coping Parent stress: stress-related actions and feelings based on a parent–child interaction (P–CDI) scale and a problematic child measure based on three sub-scales of a child’s parental distress (DC) scale | MANOVA and chi-square analyses |
|
Pisula and Kossakowska (2010) | Coping: coping strategies | Correlation analysis |
|
Hall and Graff (2010) | Parenting Stress: parents react to (1) parent stress, (2) interactive parent–child dysfunction, and (3) kid difficulty in areas where parents are affected Coping: coping health inventory for parents | Pearson product-moment correlations, regression analysis |
|
Seymour et al. (2013) | Stress: the negative emotional states of stress over the past week Coping: frequently parent engage in each of the behaviors and cognitions when coping with a specific stressful situation | Chi-square test |
|
Shepherd et al. (2018) | Parent stress: frequently experienced by parents with ASD children Coping strategies: 14 different coping styles | Preliminary correlational analyses |
|
Cappe et al. (2020) | Coping strategies: the different coping strategies by parents with ASD children Quality of Life: there has been considerable correlations between ASD stress evaluations and key ASD symptoms in all four categories with increasing perceptive of ASD symptoms Perceived stress: the factors that influence stress in their daily lives | Pearson’s chi-squared tests |
|
Ishtiaq et al. (2020) | Parenting Stress: a level of stress using self-reporting of stress Coping: coping strategy used by parent | Descriptive analysis |
|
Chu et al. (2020) | Quality of Life: a detailed care situation description with a well-being informal care assessment | Pearson correlation |
|
Hsiao et al. (2017) | Parenting Stress: positive components (examples of emotionality, personal enrichment, growth, and negative parenting components) Quality of Life: the degree in which parents are satisfied with their relationship with service providers | Structural equation modelling (SEM) |
|
Nuske et al. (2018) | Quality of life: measure of QoL for parent of children with clinical symptoms | Regression models |
|
Pisula and Dorman (2017) | Parenting Stress: three key stress areas: problems with children, personal concerns, and family issues The Quality of Life: subjective evaluations of QoL in four areas: physical, psychological, social, and environmental health | A correction for multiple comparisons |
|
Thullen and Bonsall (2017) | Parenting Stress: three domains of PS ((1) parent stress (2) dysfunction between parents and children, and (3) difficulties in children, parents responded to items) The Quality of Life: the quality of family parenthood | Pearson correlation |
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Bohadana et al. (2019) | Parenting stress: parental dysfunction, parental dissatisfaction, and difficult children as three levels of parental stress The Quality of Life: perspective of QoL parent | Two multiple regression analyses |
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Dardas and Ahmad (2015) | Parenting stress: stress in parents with ASD children under 12 years of age Coping: eight measurements in the subscale QoL: quality of life in general Quality of Life: an impression of their QoL | Bivariate and multivariable regression |
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Ni’matuzahroh; Suen, M.-W.; Ningrum, V.; Widayat; Yuniardi, M.S.; Hasanati, N.; Wang, J.-H. The Association between Parenting Stress, Positive Reappraisal Coping, and Quality of Life in Parents with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) Children: A Systematic Review. Healthcare 2022, 10, 52. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare10010052
Ni’matuzahroh, Suen M-W, Ningrum V, Widayat, Yuniardi MS, Hasanati N, Wang J-H. The Association between Parenting Stress, Positive Reappraisal Coping, and Quality of Life in Parents with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) Children: A Systematic Review. Healthcare. 2022; 10(1):52. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare10010052
Chicago/Turabian StyleNi’matuzahroh, Mein-Woei Suen, Valendriyani Ningrum, Widayat, Muhamad Salis Yuniardi, Nida Hasanati, and Jui-Hsing Wang. 2022. "The Association between Parenting Stress, Positive Reappraisal Coping, and Quality of Life in Parents with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) Children: A Systematic Review" Healthcare 10, no. 1: 52. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare10010052
APA StyleNi’matuzahroh, Suen, M.-W., Ningrum, V., Widayat, Yuniardi, M. S., Hasanati, N., & Wang, J.-H. (2022). The Association between Parenting Stress, Positive Reappraisal Coping, and Quality of Life in Parents with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) Children: A Systematic Review. Healthcare, 10(1), 52. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare10010052