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DOI: 10.1055/s-0037-1608667
Disability-Related Problems of Children and Adolescents with Moebius Sequence and their Mothers' Coping
Publikationsverlauf
11. August 2017
05. Oktober 2017
Publikationsdatum:
23. November 2017 (online)

Moebius syndrome (Online Mendelian Inheritance in Man no. 157900) or Moebius sequence is a rare nonprogressive congenital condition of still not fully understood etiology and pathogenesis, which is usually defined as a combination of facial weakness (uni- or bilateral) with impairment of ocular abduction (uni- or bilateral).[1] Disturbances in psychomotor and speech development are very common, whereas intellectual disability occurs in only 10% of children and adolescents.[1] Therefore, parents of children with Moebius syndrome are confronted with a variety of medical, psychosocial, and economic issues. They are in need of adequate information about disability-related problems and how these might affect their daily life.
To investigate these important aspects previously not delineated, a cross-sectional pilot study, including 26 subjects with Moebius syndrome (12 males, 14 females, median age: 9.4 years, range: 2–14 years) and their mothers (median age: 38 years; range: 28–47 years), was performed. Mothers completed:
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The German version of the Handicap-Related Problems for Parents Inventory (HPPI),[2] which comprises three subscales and a total scale. Internal consistency (Cronbach's α) in this study was: “Total”: 0.90, “Mother/Child Social”: 0.86, “Mother's Life”: 0.73, “Child's Health and Services”: 0.65.
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The Social Orientation of Parents with Disabled Children (SOEBEK),[3] a validated German questionnaire on parental stress and coping strategies.
Twenty-four of the subjects with Moebius syndrome lived in two-parent families, and none of them attended a school or institution for children with intellectual disabilities. A maximum of 7.7% of the mothers reported every day or more disability-related problems in different HPPI areas during the 2 months before the study ([Table 1]). HPPI scales did not differ significantly between boys and girls. Parental stress (SOEBEK; median: 20th percentile; range: < 3rd–85th percentile) was significantly positively correlated with all HPPI scales (Rho: 0.605–0.713, p ≤ 0.001). Mothers reached average levels (median: 45th–60th percentile) for the SOEBEK coping strategies “partnership intensification,” “ability to meet own needs,” and “use of social support” while “focusing on the child with a disability” was low (median: 25th percentile).
Abbreviation: HPPI, handicap-related problems for parents inventory.
This pilot study has some limitations, especially questionable representativeness and lack of a matched control group. Nevertheless, it presents initial data on disability-related problems in subjects with Moebius syndrome and their mothers' coping strategies. These findings, which need replication, should be helpful for counseling. Moreover, they are encouraging for families of a child with Moebius syndrome.
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References
- 1 Briegel W. Neuropsychiatric findings of Möbius sequence—a review. Clin Genet 2006; 70 (02) 91-97
- 2 Wallander JL, Marullo DS. Handicap-related problems in mothers of children with physical impairments. Res Dev Disabil 1997; 18 (02) 151-165
- 3 Krause MP, Petermann F. Soziale Orientierungen von Eltern behinderter Kinder (SOEBEK), Manual. Göttingen: Hogrefe; 1997