Parental stress, mental health, and child traits in Italian mothers and fathers of autistic children

IntroductionSeveral studies have investigated differences between mothers' and fathers' stress and mental health in the context of autistic children parenting. However, fewer have examined differences in parent-reported perceptions of their children's behaviors, symptom severity, and...

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Main Authors: Silvia Perzolli, Giulio Bertamini, Paola Venuti, Arianna Bentenuto
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2025-07-01
Series:Frontiers in Psychology
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Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2025.1593255/full
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author Silvia Perzolli
Giulio Bertamini
Paola Venuti
Arianna Bentenuto
author_facet Silvia Perzolli
Giulio Bertamini
Paola Venuti
Arianna Bentenuto
author_sort Silvia Perzolli
collection DOAJ
description IntroductionSeveral studies have investigated differences between mothers' and fathers' stress and mental health in the context of autistic children parenting. However, fewer have examined differences in parent-reported perceptions of their children's behaviors, symptom severity, and their associations with parental variables. This study aimed to compare parental stress (Parental Stress Index—Short From), mental health (Symptom Checklist–90), and parent-reported perceptions of child behaviors (Child Behavior Checklist—CBCL) and symptom severity (Social Responsiveness Scale—SRS). In Italian mothers and fathers of autistic children while exploring how parental wellbeing relates to both parent-reported and clinically assessed child characteristics.MethodsA total of 102 parents (51 mothers and 51 fathers) of autistic children aged 4–19 years completed questionnaires assessing stress, mental health, children's behavioral traits and symptom severity. Standardized clinical tests directly measured children's cognitive functioning (IQ) and symptom severity. Group differences between mothers and fathers were analyzed using inferential tests, while Linear Mixed Models were employed to examine the effect of parent, parental stress and mental health on parent-reported perceptions of children's behaviors and symptom severity, as well as clinically measured children's cognitive functioning and symptoms severity.ResultsMothers and fathers reported similar stress levels but mothers showed higher levels of mental health symptoms and perceived their children as having more severe internalizing and externalizing behaviors and more severe symptomatology compared to fathers. Parental mental health was significantly associated with parent-reported child internalizing behaviors, while parental stress was linked to externalizing behaviors and parent-reported autism severity. No effects emerged for child cognitive functioning, and the model on clinician-rated autism severity failed to converge.DiscussionThese findings emphasize the interconnected nature of parental wellbeing, parent-reported child characteristics, and clinically assessed child traits. Recognizing these links may inform more effective, targeted support strategies for families raising autistic children.
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spelling doaj-art-4f60f971f62d468c95a3d62f73f387f62025-07-02T08:29:38ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychology1664-10782025-07-011610.3389/fpsyg.2025.15932551593255Parental stress, mental health, and child traits in Italian mothers and fathers of autistic childrenSilvia Perzolli0Giulio Bertamini1Paola Venuti2Arianna Bentenuto3Laboratory of Observation, Diagnosis and Education (ODFLab), Department of Psychology and Cognitive Science, University of Trento, Rovereto, ItalyDepartment of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Pitie-Salpetriere University Hospital, Sorbonne University, Paris, FranceLaboratory of Observation, Diagnosis and Education (ODFLab), Department of Psychology and Cognitive Science, University of Trento, Rovereto, ItalyLaboratory of Observation, Diagnosis and Education (ODFLab), Department of Psychology and Cognitive Science, University of Trento, Rovereto, ItalyIntroductionSeveral studies have investigated differences between mothers' and fathers' stress and mental health in the context of autistic children parenting. However, fewer have examined differences in parent-reported perceptions of their children's behaviors, symptom severity, and their associations with parental variables. This study aimed to compare parental stress (Parental Stress Index—Short From), mental health (Symptom Checklist–90), and parent-reported perceptions of child behaviors (Child Behavior Checklist—CBCL) and symptom severity (Social Responsiveness Scale—SRS). In Italian mothers and fathers of autistic children while exploring how parental wellbeing relates to both parent-reported and clinically assessed child characteristics.MethodsA total of 102 parents (51 mothers and 51 fathers) of autistic children aged 4–19 years completed questionnaires assessing stress, mental health, children's behavioral traits and symptom severity. Standardized clinical tests directly measured children's cognitive functioning (IQ) and symptom severity. Group differences between mothers and fathers were analyzed using inferential tests, while Linear Mixed Models were employed to examine the effect of parent, parental stress and mental health on parent-reported perceptions of children's behaviors and symptom severity, as well as clinically measured children's cognitive functioning and symptoms severity.ResultsMothers and fathers reported similar stress levels but mothers showed higher levels of mental health symptoms and perceived their children as having more severe internalizing and externalizing behaviors and more severe symptomatology compared to fathers. Parental mental health was significantly associated with parent-reported child internalizing behaviors, while parental stress was linked to externalizing behaviors and parent-reported autism severity. No effects emerged for child cognitive functioning, and the model on clinician-rated autism severity failed to converge.DiscussionThese findings emphasize the interconnected nature of parental wellbeing, parent-reported child characteristics, and clinically assessed child traits. Recognizing these links may inform more effective, targeted support strategies for families raising autistic children.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2025.1593255/fullautismmothers and fathersparent-reported child behaviorsstressmental health
spellingShingle Silvia Perzolli
Giulio Bertamini
Paola Venuti
Arianna Bentenuto
Parental stress, mental health, and child traits in Italian mothers and fathers of autistic children
Frontiers in Psychology
autism
mothers and fathers
parent-reported child behaviors
stress
mental health
title Parental stress, mental health, and child traits in Italian mothers and fathers of autistic children
title_full Parental stress, mental health, and child traits in Italian mothers and fathers of autistic children
title_fullStr Parental stress, mental health, and child traits in Italian mothers and fathers of autistic children
title_full_unstemmed Parental stress, mental health, and child traits in Italian mothers and fathers of autistic children
title_short Parental stress, mental health, and child traits in Italian mothers and fathers of autistic children
title_sort parental stress mental health and child traits in italian mothers and fathers of autistic children
topic autism
mothers and fathers
parent-reported child behaviors
stress
mental health
url https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2025.1593255/full
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