This is our fourth article our Transition series. The last three articles discussed what transition is and why
it matters. This week, we start looking at parenting strategies for raising
children with special healthcare needs who are responsible, independent,
confident and prepared for the transition/transfer into the adult medical
system.
Raising Responsible Children
All children
must make a shift from parental to personal responsibility. All children
must learn to make good choices which are independent of active adult
involvement. And when a child has special healthcare needs, there is the
additional process of shifting the medical tasks and responsibilities.
The challenge is, telling
our children to simply "Be responsible!" doesn’t work. It is ineffective to
demand, "Do your homework, take your medicine, and make good choices."
Responsibility is something that has to come from inside the
child- not from parents trying to force it from the outside. And taking
responsibility starts early. In fact, learning about responsibility and
making good choices starts when children are old enough to throw peas from
the high chair!
This brings us to a critical subject: Parenting Skill Training.
This includes how to talk and work with children: what to say and do when they
are resistant, how to avoid power struggles in the first place, what responses
work and don't work, and how to structure a home environment in such a way that
best promotes responsibility, positive attitudes and a desire to make good
choices. Research shows that
parenting skills, responses, and disciplinary styles have a significant impact
on all of this.
If a child won't get their shoes on without arguing, brush their
teeth without nagging, and pick up their belongings when asked, how can they be
expected to do their medical treatments? Or, from an article called "Take
as Directed: Improving Adherence in the Primary Care or Specialist Care
Setting" by Edward Christophersen Ph.D. and Susan Mortweet VanScoyoc
Ph.D.:
"In the area of
pediatrics, an often overlooked but important part of the medical adherence
equation is that of the general behavioral compliance of the child. It
is unrealistic to expect a child who will not follow the directions of her
parents on anything else to follow the directions of her parents with respect
to medical regimens. Often, failures with complicated regimens like
Type 1 diabetes could have been predicted by the parent's prior lack of
knowledge of strategies for addressing general compliance
issues."
So the big question is: How do we raise kids with special
healthcare needs who are respectful, responsible and prepared for the real
world? In our next article, we'll start to answer this question.