“I hope she dies when I die”: A mother’s experience with a child of Down syndrome

Clearly for most people and most cultures, having a healthy and normal child is the most awaited moment in a couple’s life. Trisomy 21, the chromosomal anomaly associated with Down syndrome (DS), is a relatively common cause of learning disability across all human populations. Limited research condu...

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Main Authors: Saili, Jamayah, Ibrahim, Nor Hasniah
Format: Conference or Workshop Item
Language:English
Published: 2013
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Online Access:http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/3286/1/How%20Effective%20are%20Spelling-Related%20Interventions%20for.pdf
http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/3286/
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spelling my.unimas.ir.32862014-06-30T04:47:04Z http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/3286/ “I hope she dies when I die”: A mother’s experience with a child of Down syndrome Saili, Jamayah Ibrahim, Nor Hasniah AC Collections. Series. Collected works Clearly for most people and most cultures, having a healthy and normal child is the most awaited moment in a couple’s life. Trisomy 21, the chromosomal anomaly associated with Down syndrome (DS), is a relatively common cause of learning disability across all human populations. Limited research conducted in developing countries tends to characterise life for people with intellectual disability and their families as burdensome and stigmatised. While life experiences and expectancy for people with DS varies significantly across the world, the majority of research with families who have a child with DS has been conducted in relatively affluent western countries. It has been argued that DS is as much a cultural creation as a biomedical condition, yet the research on Malay Muslim mothers’ experience is sparse in Malaysia. Drawing on in-depth qualitative interview with a Malay Muslim mother, a cultural definition of having a DS child, the researcher argues that further work is needed to consider the viewpoints on parenting a child with DS which may have specific meanings in comparisons with other context and culture. The analysis of this in-depth interview yielded that the mother’s experience were marked by uncertainty about the child’s life course expectations and decisions. Two tenets especially germane to this issue are the child’s independence and growing older without significant people in her life and who will care for her when her parents die and how does she cope? The mother’s descriptions of life with a child with DS integrated religious and cultural belief systems and personal social experiences. Listening to the voice of a mother parenting a child with DS, this article will highlight the participant’s advice to other parents which was rooted in Islamic discourse but emphasized pragmatic concerns about the impact of having an intellectual disability as family member. 2013 Conference or Workshop Item NonPeerReviewed text en http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/3286/1/How%20Effective%20are%20Spelling-Related%20Interventions%20for.pdf Saili, Jamayah and Ibrahim, Nor Hasniah (2013) “I hope she dies when I die”: A mother’s experience with a child of Down syndrome. In: Paper presented at 1't Asia Pacific Conference On Dyslexia and Other Learning Disabilities 2O13: 25-27 June 2013, Borneo Convention Centre Kuching, Sarawak..
institution Universiti Malaysia Sarawak
building Centre for Academic Information Services (CAIS)
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Malaysia Sarawak
content_source UNIMAS Institutional Repository
url_provider http://ir.unimas.my/
language English
topic AC Collections. Series. Collected works
spellingShingle AC Collections. Series. Collected works
Saili, Jamayah
Ibrahim, Nor Hasniah
“I hope she dies when I die”: A mother’s experience with a child of Down syndrome
description Clearly for most people and most cultures, having a healthy and normal child is the most awaited moment in a couple’s life. Trisomy 21, the chromosomal anomaly associated with Down syndrome (DS), is a relatively common cause of learning disability across all human populations. Limited research conducted in developing countries tends to characterise life for people with intellectual disability and their families as burdensome and stigmatised. While life experiences and expectancy for people with DS varies significantly across the world, the majority of research with families who have a child with DS has been conducted in relatively affluent western countries. It has been argued that DS is as much a cultural creation as a biomedical condition, yet the research on Malay Muslim mothers’ experience is sparse in Malaysia. Drawing on in-depth qualitative interview with a Malay Muslim mother, a cultural definition of having a DS child, the researcher argues that further work is needed to consider the viewpoints on parenting a child with DS which may have specific meanings in comparisons with other context and culture. The analysis of this in-depth interview yielded that the mother’s experience were marked by uncertainty about the child’s life course expectations and decisions. Two tenets especially germane to this issue are the child’s independence and growing older without significant people in her life and who will care for her when her parents die and how does she cope? The mother’s descriptions of life with a child with DS integrated religious and cultural belief systems and personal social experiences. Listening to the voice of a mother parenting a child with DS, this article will highlight the participant’s advice to other parents which was rooted in Islamic discourse but emphasized pragmatic concerns about the impact of having an intellectual disability as family member.
format Conference or Workshop Item
author Saili, Jamayah
Ibrahim, Nor Hasniah
author_facet Saili, Jamayah
Ibrahim, Nor Hasniah
author_sort Saili, Jamayah
title “I hope she dies when I die”: A mother’s experience with a child of Down syndrome
title_short “I hope she dies when I die”: A mother’s experience with a child of Down syndrome
title_full “I hope she dies when I die”: A mother’s experience with a child of Down syndrome
title_fullStr “I hope she dies when I die”: A mother’s experience with a child of Down syndrome
title_full_unstemmed “I hope she dies when I die”: A mother’s experience with a child of Down syndrome
title_sort “i hope she dies when i die”: a mother’s experience with a child of down syndrome
publishDate 2013
url http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/3286/1/How%20Effective%20are%20Spelling-Related%20Interventions%20for.pdf
http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/3286/
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