Parents’ Experiences after Their Child’s Autism Diagnosis: A Reflexive Thematic Analysis

A child’s autism diagnosis is life-changing for their parents, due to the complex and long-term nature of the condition. Furthermore, research about the increased prevalence of autism suggests that more parents are being affected globally. However, limited studies have investigated parents’ lived ex...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Robert Hughes, Kenneth Curley, Yasuhiro Kotera
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2024-07-01
Series:Psychiatry International
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2673-5318/5/3/26
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1850259717313527808
author Robert Hughes
Kenneth Curley
Yasuhiro Kotera
author_facet Robert Hughes
Kenneth Curley
Yasuhiro Kotera
author_sort Robert Hughes
collection DOAJ
description A child’s autism diagnosis is life-changing for their parents, due to the complex and long-term nature of the condition. Furthermore, research about the increased prevalence of autism suggests that more parents are being affected globally. However, limited studies have investigated parents’ lived experience of their child being diagnosed with autism. This study aimed to explore the first-hand experience and concerns of parents when their child has been diagnosed with autism. The study employed a qualitative, exploratory design. Parents of a child who had received an autism diagnosis at least 12 months prior were invited to a video interview. Eleven parents participated in an hour-long interview. The interviews were transcribed, and an inductive reflexive thematic analysis was performed. The analysis resulted in four main themes: “Shock and control”, “A thousand little conversations”, “Put your own oxygen mask on first”, and “Reforged identities”, orientating around the period surrounding diagnosis, ongoing communication requirements, the need for self-care and reorientation of identity. These findings identify areas of heightened concern for parents and provide professionals with practical insight when evaluating their engagement approaches with these groups of parents. Findings can help psychologists, therapists, educators and parents themselves to identify strategies to support the well-being of parents who have an autistic child.
format Article
id doaj-art-5de2186c0ba74aa0bf29f01198286df2
institution OA Journals
issn 2673-5318
language English
publishDate 2024-07-01
publisher MDPI AG
record_format Article
series Psychiatry International
spelling doaj-art-5de2186c0ba74aa0bf29f01198286df22025-08-20T01:55:49ZengMDPI AGPsychiatry International2673-53182024-07-015337039410.3390/psychiatryint5030026Parents’ Experiences after Their Child’s Autism Diagnosis: A Reflexive Thematic AnalysisRobert Hughes0Kenneth Curley1Yasuhiro Kotera2College of Health, Psychology and Social Care, University of Derby, Derby DE22 1GB, UKCollege of Health, Psychology and Social Care, University of Derby, Derby DE22 1GB, UKFaculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, University of Nottingham, Nottingham NG7 2TU, UKA child’s autism diagnosis is life-changing for their parents, due to the complex and long-term nature of the condition. Furthermore, research about the increased prevalence of autism suggests that more parents are being affected globally. However, limited studies have investigated parents’ lived experience of their child being diagnosed with autism. This study aimed to explore the first-hand experience and concerns of parents when their child has been diagnosed with autism. The study employed a qualitative, exploratory design. Parents of a child who had received an autism diagnosis at least 12 months prior were invited to a video interview. Eleven parents participated in an hour-long interview. The interviews were transcribed, and an inductive reflexive thematic analysis was performed. The analysis resulted in four main themes: “Shock and control”, “A thousand little conversations”, “Put your own oxygen mask on first”, and “Reforged identities”, orientating around the period surrounding diagnosis, ongoing communication requirements, the need for self-care and reorientation of identity. These findings identify areas of heightened concern for parents and provide professionals with practical insight when evaluating their engagement approaches with these groups of parents. Findings can help psychologists, therapists, educators and parents themselves to identify strategies to support the well-being of parents who have an autistic child.https://www.mdpi.com/2673-5318/5/3/26autismparentinglived experienceautism diagnosisinductive reflexive thematic analysis
spellingShingle Robert Hughes
Kenneth Curley
Yasuhiro Kotera
Parents’ Experiences after Their Child’s Autism Diagnosis: A Reflexive Thematic Analysis
Psychiatry International
autism
parenting
lived experience
autism diagnosis
inductive reflexive thematic analysis
title Parents’ Experiences after Their Child’s Autism Diagnosis: A Reflexive Thematic Analysis
title_full Parents’ Experiences after Their Child’s Autism Diagnosis: A Reflexive Thematic Analysis
title_fullStr Parents’ Experiences after Their Child’s Autism Diagnosis: A Reflexive Thematic Analysis
title_full_unstemmed Parents’ Experiences after Their Child’s Autism Diagnosis: A Reflexive Thematic Analysis
title_short Parents’ Experiences after Their Child’s Autism Diagnosis: A Reflexive Thematic Analysis
title_sort parents experiences after their child s autism diagnosis a reflexive thematic analysis
topic autism
parenting
lived experience
autism diagnosis
inductive reflexive thematic analysis
url https://www.mdpi.com/2673-5318/5/3/26
work_keys_str_mv AT roberthughes parentsexperiencesaftertheirchildsautismdiagnosisareflexivethematicanalysis
AT kennethcurley parentsexperiencesaftertheirchildsautismdiagnosisareflexivethematicanalysis
AT yasuhirokotera parentsexperiencesaftertheirchildsautismdiagnosisareflexivethematicanalysis