Caregiver-reported social impacts in down syndrome regression disorder
Katherine N. Chow, Lilia Kazerooni, Maeve C. Lucas, Samuel T. Otey, Mariam M. Yousuf, Ruth Brown, Eileen A. Quinn, Jonathan D. Santoro, Inge Roggen, Inge Roggen, Inge Roggen, Inge Roggen, Inge Roggen

TL;DR
Caregivers of individuals with Down Syndrome Regression Disorder report significant social withdrawal and loss of connections, more so than those caring for individuals with other neurological conditions.
Contribution
This study is the first to characterize the unique social impacts on caregivers of individuals with Down Syndrome Regression Disorder compared to other neurological disorders.
Findings
65.66% of DSRD caregivers reported negative impacts on adult friendships.
DSRD caregivers were more likely to report enduring social disengagement and isolation compared to DSN caregivers.
Early interventions targeting caregiver mental health and social support are urgently needed.
Abstract
Down Syndrome Regression Disorder (DSRD) is an acute neurocognitive regression in individuals with Down syndrome (DS), causing a profound loss of acquired skills. DSRD increases demands on caregivers, to sleep disturbances, financial distress, and negative impacts on caregiver-reported social connections and perceived social support. The goal of this study was to characterize the caregiver-reported impacts of DSRD on social relationships by comparing their experiences to those of caregivers of individuals with DS and other neurological disorders (DSN). This is a narrative burden-of-care study, not a network study. Using cross-sectional study design, caregivers of individuals with DSRD (n = 228) and DSN (n = 137) were recruited from a neurology clinic and a DSRD Facebook support group. Participants completed the DSRD Caregiver Distress Survey (CDS), which included four qualitative,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDown syndrome and intellectual disability research · Disability Rights and Representation · Family and Disability Support Research
