Examining Self-compassion as Moderator Between Children’s’ Autism Severity and Mothers’ Psychological Well-being

Following Perry’s model of stress (2009), this study investigated the relation of children’s autism severity (as child characteristic and specific stressor), mothers’ self- compassion (as mothers’ personal resource), and mothers’ psychological well-being (as outcome), and the possible moderating...

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Main Author: Saura, Sonia
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Published: Archīum Ateneo 2021
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Online Access:https://archium.ateneo.edu/theses-dissertations/552
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spelling ph-ateneo-arc.theses-dissertations-16782021-10-06T05:00:31Z Examining Self-compassion as Moderator Between Children’s’ Autism Severity and Mothers’ Psychological Well-being Saura, Sonia Following Perry’s model of stress (2009), this study investigated the relation of children’s autism severity (as child characteristic and specific stressor), mothers’ self- compassion (as mothers’ personal resource), and mothers’ psychological well-being (as outcome), and the possible moderating role of the personal resource of self- compassion in the relation between the stressor and outcome. Moderation analysis was performed using PROCESS. Seventy-five mothers of school-aged children with Autism Spectrum Disorder were recruited from the province of Pangasinan in Region 1, Tarlac province in Region 3 and from the National Capital Region through convenience sampling. The Gilliam Autism Rating Scale-Third Edition, Self- compassion Scale, Ryff Scales of Psychological Well-being, and a demographic questionnaire were administered to participating mothers. Results of data analysis indicated that children’s autism severity was not related to the mothers’ psychological well-being. Mothers’ self-compassion did not function as a moderating variable but had a moderate positive relation with the psychological well-being of the mothers, r = .49, p <.01. The study highlights the findings that high levels of self-compassion is linked to positive levels of psychological well-being. In light of this salient findings, psycho-educational programs, trainings and interventions on developing and enhancing self-compassion may be beneficial for the well-being of mothers of children with ASD. Implications of the study for future research are also discussed. 2021-01-01T08:00:00Z text https://archium.ateneo.edu/theses-dissertations/552 Theses and Dissertations (All) Archīum Ateneo n/a
institution Ateneo De Manila University
building Ateneo De Manila University Library
continent Asia
country Philippines
Philippines
content_provider Ateneo De Manila University Library
collection archium.Ateneo Institutional Repository
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Saura, Sonia
Examining Self-compassion as Moderator Between Children’s’ Autism Severity and Mothers’ Psychological Well-being
description Following Perry’s model of stress (2009), this study investigated the relation of children’s autism severity (as child characteristic and specific stressor), mothers’ self- compassion (as mothers’ personal resource), and mothers’ psychological well-being (as outcome), and the possible moderating role of the personal resource of self- compassion in the relation between the stressor and outcome. Moderation analysis was performed using PROCESS. Seventy-five mothers of school-aged children with Autism Spectrum Disorder were recruited from the province of Pangasinan in Region 1, Tarlac province in Region 3 and from the National Capital Region through convenience sampling. The Gilliam Autism Rating Scale-Third Edition, Self- compassion Scale, Ryff Scales of Psychological Well-being, and a demographic questionnaire were administered to participating mothers. Results of data analysis indicated that children’s autism severity was not related to the mothers’ psychological well-being. Mothers’ self-compassion did not function as a moderating variable but had a moderate positive relation with the psychological well-being of the mothers, r = .49, p <.01. The study highlights the findings that high levels of self-compassion is linked to positive levels of psychological well-being. In light of this salient findings, psycho-educational programs, trainings and interventions on developing and enhancing self-compassion may be beneficial for the well-being of mothers of children with ASD. Implications of the study for future research are also discussed.
format text
author Saura, Sonia
author_facet Saura, Sonia
author_sort Saura, Sonia
title Examining Self-compassion as Moderator Between Children’s’ Autism Severity and Mothers’ Psychological Well-being
title_short Examining Self-compassion as Moderator Between Children’s’ Autism Severity and Mothers’ Psychological Well-being
title_full Examining Self-compassion as Moderator Between Children’s’ Autism Severity and Mothers’ Psychological Well-being
title_fullStr Examining Self-compassion as Moderator Between Children’s’ Autism Severity and Mothers’ Psychological Well-being
title_full_unstemmed Examining Self-compassion as Moderator Between Children’s’ Autism Severity and Mothers’ Psychological Well-being
title_sort examining self-compassion as moderator between children’s’ autism severity and mothers’ psychological well-being
publisher Archīum Ateneo
publishDate 2021
url https://archium.ateneo.edu/theses-dissertations/552
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