Coping strategies of mother carers of children living with chronic illness and disease in a rural South African community

Other

Coping strategies of mother carers of children living with chronic illness and disease in a rural South African community

Published in: Journal of Psychology in Africa
Volume 26 , issue 5 , 2016 , pages: 432–435
DOI: 10.1080/14330237.2016.1219546
Author(s): Tholene Sodi Department of Psychology, South Africa , Bontle Kgopa Department of Psychology, South Africa

Abstract

The present study explored the coping strategies used by mother carers of children living with chronic illness and disease (CID) in a rural South African community. Ten mothers (age range = 30 to 56 years) were selected through snowball sampling to participate in the present study. They provided care to their children, a majority (50%) of whom had epilepsy, followed by asthma (20%) and other conditions. Data on the coping strategies used by mothers of children living with CID were collected using semi-structured interviews and analysed thematically. The results showed that mother carers tended to use three types of coping strategies, namely: appraisal-focused, problem-focused and emotion-focused strategies. Appraisal-focused was commonly used by mother carers whose children had epilepsy, whilst mother carers of children with asthma tended to use problem-focused coping strategies. All mother carers were found to use emotion-focused strategies to varying degrees in coping with the chronic diseases of their children.

Get new issue alerts for Journal of Psychology in Africa