TY - JOUR PY - 2022// TI - Self-compassion mitigates the cognitive, affective, and social impact of courtesy stigma on parents of autistic children JO - Social psychiatry and psychiatric epidemiology A1 - Chan, Kevin Ka Shing A1 - Fung, Winnie Tsz Wa A1 - Leung, Donald Chi Kin SP - ePub EP - ePub VL - ePub IS - ePub N2 - PURPOSE: Due to the courtesy stigma of autism spectrum disorder, many parents of autistic children are devaluated and discriminated against by the public. Despite the high prevalence of this courtesy stigma, very few studies have examined its negative effects on parents of autistic children and explored the factors that may protect the parents from these negative effects. The present study utilized a 2-year, two-wave prospective longitudinal design to examine the associations of courtesy stigma with adverse cognitive (self-stigma), affective (depressive and anxiety symptoms), and social (parent-child and inter-parental conflicts) consequences for parents of autistic children and to test whether these associations would be moderated and mitigated by self-compassion.

METHODS: A total of 381 parents of autistic children completed questionnaires about courtesy stigma, self-compassion, self-stigma, depressive and anxiety symptoms, and parent-child and inter-parental conflicts at time 1 (T1) and time 2 (T2).

RESULTS: Courtesy stigma interacted with self-compassion at T1 in predicting self-stigma, depressive and anxiety symptoms, and parent-child and inter-parental conflicts at T2. Specifically, the associations of courtesy stigma with the adverse psychological consequences were weaker for parents with high self-compassion than for those with low self-compassion.

CONCLUSION: Our results demonstrate the prospective associations of courtesy stigma with adverse cognitive, affective, and social consequences for parents of autistic children, as well as the protective effects of self-compassion against such associations. These results highlight the importance of increasing parents' self-compassion to help them cope with courtesy stigma and improve their psychological well-being.

Language: en

LA - en SN - 0933-7954 UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00127-022-02413-9 ID - ref1 ER -