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Dive into the research topics where Paul R. Benson is active.

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Featured researches published by Paul R. Benson.


Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders | 2009

Anger, Stress Proliferation, and Depressed Mood Among Parents of Children with ASD: A Longitudinal Replication

Paul R. Benson; Kristie L. Karlof

Stress proliferation (the tendency for stressors to create additional stressors) has been suggested as an important contributor to depression among caregivers. The present study utilized longitudinal data from 90 parents of children with ASD to replicate and extend a prior cross-sectional study on stress proliferation by Benson (J Autism Develop Disord 36:685–695, 2006). Consistent with Benson’s earlier findings, regression analyses indicated that stress proliferation mediated the effect of child symptom severity on parent depression. Parent anger was also found to mediate the effect of symptom severity on stress proliferation as well as the effect of stress proliferation on parent depression. Finally, informal social support was found to be related to decreased parent depressed mood over time. Implications of study findings are discussed.


Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders | 2012

Network characteristics, perceived social support, and psychological adjustment in mothers of children with autism spectrum disorder.

Paul R. Benson

This study examined the characteristics of the support networks of 106 mothers of children with ASD and their relationship to perceived social support, depressed mood, and subjective well-being. Using structural equation modeling, two competing sets of hypotheses were assessed: (1) that network characteristics would impact psychological adjustment directly, and (2) that network effects on adjustment would be indirect, mediated by perceived social support. Results primarily lent support to the latter hypotheses, with measures of network structure (network size) and function (proportion of network members providing emotional support) predicting increased levels of perceived social support which, in turn, predicted decreased depressed mood and increased well-being. Results also indicated that increased interpersonal strain in the maternal network was directly and indirectly associated with increased maternal depression, while being indirectly linked to reduced well-being. Study limitations and implications are discussed.


Autism | 2011

Assessing expressed emotion in mothers of children with autism: The Autism-Specific Five Minute Speech Sample

Paul R. Benson; Dave Daley; Kristie L. Karlof; Dorothy Robison

Background: Expressed emotion (EE) is a measure of family emotional climate found to be predictive of symptom levels in a range of psychiatric, medical, and developmental disorders, including autism. Method: Employing data from 104 mothers of children with autism, this study examines the Autism-Specific Five Minute Speech Sample (AFMSS), a modified EE coding system based on the widely used Five Minute Speech Sample (Magana et al., 1986). Findings: With the exception of one EE component, emotional over-involvement, the revised coding system demonstrated adequate internal consistency and good to excellent inter-rater and code-recode reliability. It also demonstrated acceptable validity, based on its significant correlations with factors linked to EE in previous research. Regression analyses also indicated AFMSS-EE to be a significant predictor of child social competence, but not child problem behaviors. Discussion: While further testing is required, the AFMSS appears to be a useful method of assessing EE within the context of parenting children with autism and related disorders.


Evaluation and Program Planning | 1996

A state network of family support services: The massachusetts family support demonstration project

Paul R. Benson; Gene A. Fisher; Augusto Diana; Lorna Simon; Gail Gamache; Richard Tessler; Melissa McDermeit

Abstract Mental health professionals have recently begun to provide supportive services to families of the mentally ill. In assisting family members who are either living with or caring for a relative with mental illness, support programs may provide a variety of services, including respite care, peer support groups, educational workshops, supportive counseling, and service linkage. While an important step forward, professional family support programs remain rare, serving only limited areas. This article describes a multisite network of professional family support programs funded by the Massachusetts Department of Mental Health during the late 1980s. A history and description of the demonstration project is provided, as is an overview of findings from a two-year project evaluation. Evaluation results indicate program participation to be associated with a number of favorable family outcomes, including reduced levels of family stress and burden. While these findings suggest program expansion is warranted, qualitative findings point to several noteworthy implementational difficulties experienced by support services, many of them flowing from ambiguities surrounding the concept of “family support” as a service philosophy and model of practice.


Autism | 2018

The impact of child and family stressors on the self-rated health of mothers of children with autism spectrum disorder: Associations with depressed mood over a 12-year period

Paul R. Benson

Employing a cohort sequential design and multilevel modeling, the effects of child and family stressors and maternal depressed mood on the self-rated health of 110 mothers of children with autism spectrum disorder were assessed over a 12-year period when children in the study were 7–19 years old. Findings indicate a significant decline in self-rated health over time. In addition, child and family stressors, as well as maternal depressed mood, exerted significant between-persons effects on self-rated health such that mothers who reported more stressors and depressed mood across the study period were less likely to rate themselves in better health across that period. In addition, a significant within-person relationship between maternal depressed mood and self-rated health was found, indicating that at times when mothers reported higher levels of depressed mood than usual (their personal average across the study), they were significantly less likely to report better self-rated health. Finally, maternal depressed mood partially mediated the between-persons effects of child and family stressors on self-rated health such that increased stressors led to increased maternal depressed mood which, in turn, led to poorer maternal self-rated health. Findings suggest that chronic stressors erode maternal health over time and that depression may be an important mechanism linking stressors to decreased maternal health.


Research in Autism Spectrum Disorders | 2010

Coping, Distress, and Well-Being in Mothers of Children with Autism.

Paul R. Benson


Autism | 2008

Maternal involvement in the education of young children with autism spectrum disorders

Paul R. Benson; Kristie L. Karlof; Gary N. Siperstein


Research in Autism Spectrum Disorders | 2008

Child, parent, and family predictors of latter adjustment in siblings of children with autism

Paul R. Benson; Kristie L. Karlof


Law and Human Behavior | 1988

Information disclosure, subject understanding, and informed consent in psychiatric research.

Paul R. Benson; Loren H. Roth; Paul S. Appelbaum; Charles W. Lidz; William J. Winslade


Hastings Center Report | 1987

False hopes and best data

Paul S. Appelbaum; Loren H. Roth; Charles W. Lidz; Paul R. Benson; William J. Winslade

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Kristie L. Karlof

University of Massachusetts Boston

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Charles W. Lidz

University of Massachusetts Medical School

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William J. Winslade

University of Texas Medical Branch

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Loren H. Roth

University of Pittsburgh

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Gary N. Siperstein

University of Massachusetts Boston

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Carole C. Upshur

University of Massachusetts Medical School

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David B. Resnik

National Institutes of Health

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Elizabeth Clemens

University of Massachusetts Boston

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