4.2 Article

Disruptions and Adaptations in Family Functioning: A Study of Families' Experiences with PANS/PANDAS

Journal

JOURNAL OF CHILD AND FAMILY STUDIES
Volume 31, Issue 3, Pages 790-806

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10826-021-02101-3

Keywords

PANS; PANDAS; Chronic illness; Family functioning; Children; Qualitative

Funding

  1. Center for the Study of Culture, Health, and Human Development at the University of Connecticut

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This study investigated the changes in family functioning following the onset of PANS/PANDAS, finding that the child's state significantly influenced the family's functioning and the lack of support from the medical community, school system, family, and friends also had a negative impact. Emotional well-being was greatly impacted, differing from the impact of other childhood chronic illnesses on family functioning.
The current study examined changes in family functioning following the onset of Pediatric Acute-Onset Neuropsychiatric Syndrome (PANS)/Pediatric Autoimmune Neuropsychiatric Disorders Associated with Streptococcal Infections (PANDAS). A social-ecological and systems framework was used to investigate (1) how families' day-to-day lives and functioning evolved since the onset of PANS/PANDAS, (2) challenges families faced in raising a child with this condition, (3) changes in family sub-systems, and (4) sources of support. Qualitative research was conducted in two phases: narrative thematic analyses of online parent forum threads followed by semi-structured interviews with nine families. Five primary themes are presented: (a) Child Symptoms and Clinical Course, (b) Family Resources and Institutional Barriers, (c) Close Relationships (sub-themes: family sub-systems and support network - extended family and friends), (d) Routines and Daily Life, and (e) Family Emotional Well-Being. It was found that depending on the state of the child (i.e., well or in flare/exacerbation), the family's level of functioning fluctuated. Family functioning was also found to be impacted by lack of support from the medical community, child's school system, family and friends. The marital relationship was found to be greatly impacted, in addition to strains in the parent-child and sibling relationships. Analyses revealed that the severity of the neuropsychiatric symptoms was a particularly challenging aspect of PANS/PANDAS with many families using trauma metaphors to describe their experience. The impact on the emotional well-being of the family entails a level of suffering that diverges from the literature on the impact of other childhood chronic illness on family functioning.

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