KU researchers examine how family life is affected by children who are
deaf
LAWRENCE -- Two University of Kansas researchers have reviewed research
on families of children who are deaf and have concluded that, although
service providers normally focus on the children, everyone in a family
is affected by the child's disability.
Ann Turnbull, professor of special education, and Carla Jackson,
clinical instructor in speech pathology, had their review published in
the spring 2004 issue of Topics in Early Childhood Special Education.
Turnbull and Jackson reviewed 17 academic articles published between
1985 and 2002. They wanted to know how the presence of a child who is
deaf affects family life in four general areas: parenting, relationships
among family members, relationships of the family to others in the
social network and access to services.
Two or three children out of a thousand are born deaf or hard of hearing
-- 90 percent of them to parents who hear normally. The quality of
family communication is heavily influenced by everyone's willingness to
employ one of the eight communications systems now in common use with
people who are deaf, according to the research Turnbull and Jackson
reviewed.
Families may experience some isolation as other people pull away after
the birth of a child who is deaf. At the same time, the newborn's family
may hesitate to engage with the deaf community or attend deaf cultural
events.
The research review by Turnbull and Jackson found that as parents search
for services, they may not find doctors helpful. And in their first
years there's a scarcity of teachers for children who are deaf.
Many of the studies reviewed by the KU researchers involved few
families. So Jackson is conducting a national survey of 200 families to
assess the degree to which the deafness of one member has impacted them
in the four areas.
Among the findings reported in the articles that Jackson and Turnbull
looked
at:
-- Families of deaf children are better at problem-solving than families
of hearing children.
-- Children who are deaf are less likely than hearing children to
maintain a conversation to develop an idea introduced by someone else.
-- Family members who can hear often don't share a deaf child's
preferred mode of communication.
-- Parents who have frequent contact with adults who are deaf are more
responsive to a child who is deaf -- but only 10 percent of hearing
parents have that contact.
-- Parents who have lots of contact with other parents of children who
are deaf, as well as with adults who are deaf, bond with children who
are deaf better.
-- Topping the list of things hearing parents do with a child who is
deaf is dealing with hearing loss. Working on speech skills comes in
second.
-- Mothers who are deaf are better than hearing mothers at getting a
deaf child's attention because they use more physical cues to do so.
-- A third of the families in one survey reported negative changes in
social relationships after the birth of a child who is deaf.
-- Only one in five doctors was described, in one survey, as "very
helpful" by parents of children who are deaf.
-- In a 16-state survey, only 30 percent of early-intervention sites for
children who are deaf had a teacher on staff for the children.
Deafness may be the most profound sensory loss. For families, there can
be considerable social loss as well, Turnbull and Jackson write in their
paper. Such families may spend a lot of time "overcoming barriers to
full inclusion in the hearing and/or deaf community."
Nevertheless, the families, given their responsibility, can't afford to
become dispirited, Turnbull and Jackson write. Their paper quotes the
mother of a 2-year-old: "Here you bring home what you think is going to
be a perfectly normal baby, and then you find out -- wow, this child
can't hear my voice. (c) The whole family has to kind of give."
http://www.ur.ku.edu/News/04N/AugNews/Aug4/deaf.html