Self-reported health and sickness benefits among parents of children with a disability

This article investigates the possible consequences in self-reported health and receipt of sickness benefits when parenting a child with a disability This study uses data from the population health study, The Nord-Trøndelag Health Study (HUNT 2), and the historical event database, FD-Trygd, which co...

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Main Authors: Christian Wendelborg, Jan Tøssebro
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Stockholm University Press 2015-07-01
Series:Scandinavian Journal of Disability Research
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.sjdr.se/articles/337
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spelling doaj-d1619ff8e743433fb8addce27b68ca812020-11-24T21:32:58ZengStockholm University PressScandinavian Journal of Disability Research1501-74191745-30112015-07-0118321022110.1080/15017419.2015.1063544266Self-reported health and sickness benefits among parents of children with a disabilityChristian Wendelborg0Jan Tøssebro1NTNU Social Research AS, Trondheim, NorwayNTNU Social Research AS, Trondheim, NorwayThis article investigates the possible consequences in self-reported health and receipt of sickness benefits when parenting a child with a disability This study uses data from the population health study, The Nord-Trøndelag Health Study (HUNT 2), and the historical event database, FD-Trygd, which contains Social Security and national insurance data for the Norwegian population. In the analysis, we compare 1587 parents of a child with a disability to other parents. Results indicate that parenting a disabled child impacts on self-reported health, particularly among mothers; however, being a parent to a disabled child has a much stronger effect in explaining the variance in received sickness benefits, and also length of time and frequency of having received sickness benefits. Parents with disabled children report just slightly lower self-reported health but are on sickness benefits more often than other parents which may be attributed to their extended care responsibilities.https://www.sjdr.se/articles/337Parenting children with disabilityhealth outcomessupport system
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Christian Wendelborg
Jan Tøssebro
spellingShingle Christian Wendelborg
Jan Tøssebro
Self-reported health and sickness benefits among parents of children with a disability
Scandinavian Journal of Disability Research
Parenting children with disability
health outcomes
support system
author_facet Christian Wendelborg
Jan Tøssebro
author_sort Christian Wendelborg
title Self-reported health and sickness benefits among parents of children with a disability
title_short Self-reported health and sickness benefits among parents of children with a disability
title_full Self-reported health and sickness benefits among parents of children with a disability
title_fullStr Self-reported health and sickness benefits among parents of children with a disability
title_full_unstemmed Self-reported health and sickness benefits among parents of children with a disability
title_sort self-reported health and sickness benefits among parents of children with a disability
publisher Stockholm University Press
series Scandinavian Journal of Disability Research
issn 1501-7419
1745-3011
publishDate 2015-07-01
description This article investigates the possible consequences in self-reported health and receipt of sickness benefits when parenting a child with a disability This study uses data from the population health study, The Nord-Trøndelag Health Study (HUNT 2), and the historical event database, FD-Trygd, which contains Social Security and national insurance data for the Norwegian population. In the analysis, we compare 1587 parents of a child with a disability to other parents. Results indicate that parenting a disabled child impacts on self-reported health, particularly among mothers; however, being a parent to a disabled child has a much stronger effect in explaining the variance in received sickness benefits, and also length of time and frequency of having received sickness benefits. Parents with disabled children report just slightly lower self-reported health but are on sickness benefits more often than other parents which may be attributed to their extended care responsibilities.
topic Parenting children with disability
health outcomes
support system
url https://www.sjdr.se/articles/337
work_keys_str_mv AT christianwendelborg selfreportedhealthandsicknessbenefitsamongparentsofchildrenwithadisability
AT jantøssebro selfreportedhealthandsicknessbenefitsamongparentsofchildrenwithadisability
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