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Testing Respite Effect of Work on Stress Among Mothers of Children with Special Needs

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Abstract

Extant research is ambivalent about whether or not working outside the home provides mothers of children with special needs a buffer against the stressful effects of caregiving. The empirical evidence of a respite effect is based primarily on small, non-probability samples. The study reported here used a large nationally representative sample of families from the National Survey of American Families (NSAF) and analysis that addressed the biasing effects of simultaneity between the dependent variable (parent stress) and employment. Results produced are consistent with a caregiver-specific respite effect from work, at least among mother caregivers of older children who were not concerned that working will have negative effects on their child’s well-being and who worked regular shifts in higher level occupations.

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Acknowledgments

This study was funded by the Association for Public Policy Analysis and Management/NSAF Small Research Grants Program in collaboration with the Annie E. Casey Foundation. The author thanks Timothy Diomede and Sun Young Yoon for help with the literature review and two anonymous reviewers for very helpful recommendations for improving the paper.

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Correspondence to Lisa A. Morris.

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Morris, L.A. Testing Respite Effect of Work on Stress Among Mothers of Children with Special Needs. J Fam Econ Iss 33, 24–40 (2012). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10834-011-9267-y

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