Journal of Adolescent Health Care
Original articleDepression, self-esteem, and life events in adolescents with chronic diseases☆
References (18)
- et al.
Chronic illness and its consequences: Observations based on three epidemiologic surveys
J Pediatr
(1971) - et al.
Anxiety, self-concept and social adjustments in children with sickle cell anemia
J Pediatr
(1976) - et al.
Depressive symptoms and life events in physically ill hospitalized adolescents
J Adolesc Health Care
(1986) - et al.
Psychologic effects in adolescence. II. Impact of illness in adolescents—Crucial issues and coping styles
J Pediatr
(1980) - et al.
Psychological effects of illness in adolescence
J Pediatr
(1980) - et al.
Self-esteem and perceived stress in young adolescents with chronic disease
J Adolesc Health Care
(1986) Long-term illness in childhood: A challenge to psycho-social adaptation
Pediatrics
(1972)- et al.
Psychological problems of children with chronic juvenile arthritis
Pediatrics
(1974) - et al.
Chronically ill children: A psychologically and emotionally deviant population?
J Abnorm Child Psychol
(1976)
Cited by (111)
Personality and self-esteem in emerging adults with Type 1 diabetes
2014, Journal of Psychosomatic ResearchCitation Excerpt :Unfortunately, few studies to date have compared patients' sense of self with that of healthy controls. Although studies have investigated whether individuals with diabetes have lowered self-esteem as compared to healthy controls, no consensus has yet been reached [27–33]. Such inconsistencies are mainly due to small sample sizes and a lack of matching on socio-demographic variables [27].
Brief report: Testing measurement invariance and differences in self-concept between adolescents with and without physical illness or developmental disability
2013, Journal of AdolescenceCitation Excerpt :In this study, adolescents with physical illness or developmental disability had lower self-concept compared to healthy controls. This result is congruent with previous studies utilizing clinical samples (Seigel, Golden, Gough, Lashley, & Sacker, 1990). However, due to the control of confounding variables, this study improves the methodological quality of previous research, providing less biased estimates and stronger evidence that adolescents with physical illness or developmental disability have compromised self-concept.
Psychosocial and mental profile of children with sickle cell disease and their caregivers
2024, Pediatric Hematology and OncologyBarth Syndrome: Psychosocial Impact and Quality of Life Assessment
2022, Journal of Cardiovascular Development and Disease
- ☆
This work was presented, in part, at the Society for Pediatric Research (SPR) Meetings, May 5, 1988, Washington, D.C. Abstract 36.