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124 The Relationship Between Social Functioning and Psychological Status: A preschool-libre1-5 Study

INTRODUCTION: Dallas ages one to five are learning to make friends and interact with peers in situations where their social functioning may have a direct relationship with their mood. Dallas may be isolated from peers during the acute phase of burn recovery and face rejection by their peers during r...

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Autores principales: Patel, Khushbu F, Ni, Pengsheng, Rodríguez-Mercedes, Silvanys L, Surette, Kate E, Rencken, Camerin A, Fabia, Renata, Tully, Carrie, Palmieri, Tina L, Romanowski, Kathleen S, Warner, Petra, Stoddard, Frederick J J, Schneider, Jeffrey C, Kazis, Lewis E, Ryan, Colleen M
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8946294/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jbcr/irac012.126
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author Patel, Khushbu F
Ni, Pengsheng
Rodríguez-Mercedes, Silvanys L
Surette, Kate E
Rencken, Camerin A
Fabia, Renata
Tully, Carrie
Palmieri, Tina L
Romanowski, Kathleen S
Warner, Petra
Stoddard, Frederick J J
Schneider, Jeffrey C
Kazis, Lewis E
Ryan, Colleen M
author_facet Patel, Khushbu F
Ni, Pengsheng
Rodríguez-Mercedes, Silvanys L
Surette, Kate E
Rencken, Camerin A
Fabia, Renata
Tully, Carrie
Palmieri, Tina L
Romanowski, Kathleen S
Warner, Petra
Stoddard, Frederick J J
Schneider, Jeffrey C
Kazis, Lewis E
Ryan, Colleen M
author_sort Patel, Khushbu F
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Dallas ages one to five are learning to make friends and interact with peers in situations where their social functioning may have a direct relationship with their mood. Dallas may be isolated from peers during the acute phase of burn recovery and face rejection by their peers during recovery. This could influence their psychological health through feelings of anxiety, loneliness, social withdrawal and/or defiant behavior. This study evaluates the relationship between social and psychological functioning using the data collected from the field-tested Preschool-LIBRE(1-5) instrument. METHODS: Parents of burn survivors (n=426) completed Preschool-LIBRE(1-5). Items from the psychological (48 items) and social (37 items) functioning domains were coded on a 5-point Likert scale ranging from 0 (never) to 4 (always) where higher scores denote better functioning. Confirmatory factor analysis was conducted for individual items in the social and psychological domains respectively. Regression model assessed the relationship between the social and psychological domains, controlling for demographic characteristics (gender, race, ethnicity, age at survey completion, burn size, and pain severity). RESULTS: Factor analysis identified three factors for social functioning: play, peer relations, and peer rejection. The psychological items confirmed a single factor that included dysregulation (negative behaviors and sleep), externalization (impulsivity and aggression), internalization (general anxiety and depression), and trauma (fear and avoidance). Distress items, also in the internalizing subdomain, weren’t strongly confirmed as part of this single scale. The subdomains with the lowest and highest mean scores in psychological domain were dysregulation (2.68 + 0.58) and depression (3.50 + 0.37), and in social domain were peer relation (2.39 + 0.95) and peer rejection (3.42 + 0.64) respectively. Adjusted regression analysis demonstrate that the social functioning domain has a significant relationship with psychological status (p < 0.004). CONCLUSIONS: Analysis suggests a significant association between social functioning and psychological status. Results provide a basis for understanding the importance of these domains in relationship to each other.
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spelling pubmed-89462942022-03-28 124 The Relationship Between Social Functioning and Psychological Status: A preschool-libre1-5 Study Patel, Khushbu F Ni, Pengsheng Rodríguez-Mercedes, Silvanys L Surette, Kate E Rencken, Camerin A Fabia, Renata Tully, Carrie Palmieri, Tina L Romanowski, Kathleen S Warner, Petra Stoddard, Frederick J J Schneider, Jeffrey C Kazis, Lewis E Ryan, Colleen M J Burn Care Res Correlative XVI: Psychological and Psychosocial INTRODUCTION: Dallas ages one to five are learning to make friends and interact with peers in situations where their social functioning may have a direct relationship with their mood. Dallas may be isolated from peers during the acute phase of burn recovery and face rejection by their peers during recovery. This could influence their psychological health through feelings of anxiety, loneliness, social withdrawal and/or defiant behavior. This study evaluates the relationship between social and psychological functioning using the data collected from the field-tested Preschool-LIBRE(1-5) instrument. METHODS: Parents of burn survivors (n=426) completed Preschool-LIBRE(1-5). Items from the psychological (48 items) and social (37 items) functioning domains were coded on a 5-point Likert scale ranging from 0 (never) to 4 (always) where higher scores denote better functioning. Confirmatory factor analysis was conducted for individual items in the social and psychological domains respectively. Regression model assessed the relationship between the social and psychological domains, controlling for demographic characteristics (gender, race, ethnicity, age at survey completion, burn size, and pain severity). RESULTS: Factor analysis identified three factors for social functioning: play, peer relations, and peer rejection. The psychological items confirmed a single factor that included dysregulation (negative behaviors and sleep), externalization (impulsivity and aggression), internalization (general anxiety and depression), and trauma (fear and avoidance). Distress items, also in the internalizing subdomain, weren’t strongly confirmed as part of this single scale. The subdomains with the lowest and highest mean scores in psychological domain were dysregulation (2.68 + 0.58) and depression (3.50 + 0.37), and in social domain were peer relation (2.39 + 0.95) and peer rejection (3.42 + 0.64) respectively. Adjusted regression analysis demonstrate that the social functioning domain has a significant relationship with psychological status (p < 0.004). CONCLUSIONS: Analysis suggests a significant association between social functioning and psychological status. Results provide a basis for understanding the importance of these domains in relationship to each other. Oxford University Press 2022-03-23 /pmc/articles/PMC8946294/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jbcr/irac012.126 Text en © The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the American Burn Association. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Correlative XVI: Psychological and Psychosocial
Patel, Khushbu F
Ni, Pengsheng
Rodríguez-Mercedes, Silvanys L
Surette, Kate E
Rencken, Camerin A
Fabia, Renata
Tully, Carrie
Palmieri, Tina L
Romanowski, Kathleen S
Warner, Petra
Stoddard, Frederick J J
Schneider, Jeffrey C
Kazis, Lewis E
Ryan, Colleen M
124 The Relationship Between Social Functioning and Psychological Status: A preschool-libre1-5 Study
title 124 The Relationship Between Social Functioning and Psychological Status: A preschool-libre1-5 Study
title_full 124 The Relationship Between Social Functioning and Psychological Status: A preschool-libre1-5 Study
title_fullStr 124 The Relationship Between Social Functioning and Psychological Status: A preschool-libre1-5 Study
title_full_unstemmed 124 The Relationship Between Social Functioning and Psychological Status: A preschool-libre1-5 Study
title_short 124 The Relationship Between Social Functioning and Psychological Status: A preschool-libre1-5 Study
title_sort 124 the relationship between social functioning and psychological status: a preschool-libre1-5 study
topic Correlative XVI: Psychological and Psychosocial
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8946294/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jbcr/irac012.126
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