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Correlation between aggressive behaviour and stress in people with intellectual disability in relation to the type of housing

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2016
1012.pdf (2.329Mb)
Authors
Tamaš, Daniela
Glumbić, Nenad
Golubović, Špela
Article (Published version)
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Abstract
Backround: Several research findings indicate that aggression in individuals with intellectual disability (ID) is significantly associated with environmental, housing and living conditions. The aim of this study is to determine levels and forms of aggressive behaviour found among individuals with ID; also examine levels of stress experienced as a result of housing conditions and relationships between aggressive behaviours and stressful experiences encountered among individuals with ID living in different housing types. Method: A total of 122 participants participated in the study, 51 of whom reside in institutions, 38 of whom live with families and 33 of whom participate in supported housing programmes. Following instruments have been used: The Lifestress Inventory, The Adult Scale of Hostility and Aggression Reactive-Proactive (A-SHARP). Results: The results reveal that there is a connection between housing types and levels and forms of aggressive behaviour and the level of stress exp...erienced by the individuals with ID. Aggressive behaviour is least pronounced among the participants living in supported housing programmes (verbal aggression: p=0.001; bullying: p=0.002; covert aggression; p=0.003; hostility affect: p=0.002 and physical aggression: p=0.001). Among the participants living in institutions and with families is no statistically significant difference in terms of the level of any form of aggressive behaviour. Participants from supported housing programmes showed significantly lower levels of stress in comparison to the other two sub-samples (p=0.000). Conclusions: There is a statistically significant correlation between aggressive behaviour among individuals with ID and experienced stress, depending on the type of the participants housing.

Keywords:
Aggression / Intellectual disability / Stress / Supported housing
Source:
Journal of Special Education and Rehabilitation, 2016, 17, 3-4, 46-61
Publisher:
  • Institute of Special Education and Rehablitation

DOI: 10.19057/jser.2016.9

ISSN: 1409-6099

Scopus: 2-s2.0-84996489745
[ Google Scholar ]
1
URI
http://rfasper.fasper.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/1015
Collections
  • Radovi istraživača / Researcher's publications
Institution/Community
rFASPER
TY  - JOUR
AU  - Tamaš, Daniela
AU  - Glumbić, Nenad
AU  - Golubović, Špela
PY  - 2016
UR  - http://rfasper.fasper.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/1015
AB  - Backround: Several research findings indicate that aggression in individuals with intellectual disability (ID) is significantly associated with environmental, housing and living conditions. The aim of this study is to determine levels and forms of aggressive behaviour found among individuals with ID; also examine levels of stress experienced as a result of housing conditions and relationships between aggressive behaviours and stressful experiences encountered among individuals with ID living in different housing types. Method: A total of 122 participants participated in the study, 51 of whom reside in institutions, 38 of whom live with families and 33 of whom participate in supported housing programmes. Following instruments have been used: The Lifestress Inventory, The Adult Scale of Hostility and Aggression Reactive-Proactive (A-SHARP). Results: The results reveal that there is a connection between housing types and levels and forms of aggressive behaviour and the level of stress experienced by the individuals with ID. Aggressive behaviour is least pronounced among the participants living in supported housing programmes (verbal aggression: p=0.001; bullying: p=0.002; covert aggression; p=0.003; hostility affect: p=0.002 and physical aggression: p=0.001). Among the participants living in institutions and with families is no statistically significant difference in terms of the level of any form of aggressive behaviour. Participants from supported housing programmes showed significantly lower levels of stress in comparison to the other two sub-samples (p=0.000). Conclusions: There is a statistically significant correlation between aggressive behaviour among individuals with ID and experienced stress, depending on the type of the participants housing.
PB  - Institute of Special Education and Rehablitation
T2  - Journal of Special Education and Rehabilitation
T1  - Correlation between aggressive behaviour and stress in people with intellectual disability in relation to the type of housing
EP  - 61
IS  - 3-4
SP  - 46
VL  - 17
DO  - 10.19057/jser.2016.9
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Tamaš, Daniela and Glumbić, Nenad and Golubović, Špela",
year = "2016",
abstract = "Backround: Several research findings indicate that aggression in individuals with intellectual disability (ID) is significantly associated with environmental, housing and living conditions. The aim of this study is to determine levels and forms of aggressive behaviour found among individuals with ID; also examine levels of stress experienced as a result of housing conditions and relationships between aggressive behaviours and stressful experiences encountered among individuals with ID living in different housing types. Method: A total of 122 participants participated in the study, 51 of whom reside in institutions, 38 of whom live with families and 33 of whom participate in supported housing programmes. Following instruments have been used: The Lifestress Inventory, The Adult Scale of Hostility and Aggression Reactive-Proactive (A-SHARP). Results: The results reveal that there is a connection between housing types and levels and forms of aggressive behaviour and the level of stress experienced by the individuals with ID. Aggressive behaviour is least pronounced among the participants living in supported housing programmes (verbal aggression: p=0.001; bullying: p=0.002; covert aggression; p=0.003; hostility affect: p=0.002 and physical aggression: p=0.001). Among the participants living in institutions and with families is no statistically significant difference in terms of the level of any form of aggressive behaviour. Participants from supported housing programmes showed significantly lower levels of stress in comparison to the other two sub-samples (p=0.000). Conclusions: There is a statistically significant correlation between aggressive behaviour among individuals with ID and experienced stress, depending on the type of the participants housing.",
publisher = "Institute of Special Education and Rehablitation",
journal = "Journal of Special Education and Rehabilitation",
title = "Correlation between aggressive behaviour and stress in people with intellectual disability in relation to the type of housing",
pages = "61-46",
number = "3-4",
volume = "17",
doi = "10.19057/jser.2016.9"
}
Tamaš, D., Glumbić, N.,& Golubović, Š.. (2016). Correlation between aggressive behaviour and stress in people with intellectual disability in relation to the type of housing. in Journal of Special Education and Rehabilitation
Institute of Special Education and Rehablitation., 17(3-4), 46-61.
https://doi.org/10.19057/jser.2016.9
Tamaš D, Glumbić N, Golubović Š. Correlation between aggressive behaviour and stress in people with intellectual disability in relation to the type of housing. in Journal of Special Education and Rehabilitation. 2016;17(3-4):46-61.
doi:10.19057/jser.2016.9 .
Tamaš, Daniela, Glumbić, Nenad, Golubović, Špela, "Correlation between aggressive behaviour and stress in people with intellectual disability in relation to the type of housing" in Journal of Special Education and Rehabilitation, 17, no. 3-4 (2016):46-61,
https://doi.org/10.19057/jser.2016.9 . .

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