Promotion of Wellbeing for Children of Parents With Mental Illness: A Model Protocol for Research and Intervention
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/16957Date
2019-09-06Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Reedtz, Charlotte; Doesum, Karin van; Signorini, Giulia; Lauritzen, Camilla; van Amelsvoort, Therese; Van Santvoort, Floor; Young, Allan H.; Conus, Philippe; Musil, Richard; Schulze, Thomas; Berk, Michael; Stringaris, Argyris; Piché, Geneviève; de Girolamo, GiovanniAbstract
Methods: Participants will be parents receiving treatment in mental health services in participating countries and their minor children aged 6–18 years. Participants should be randomized into an intervention group or control group. Data should be retrieved from electronic patient journals (demographics, DSM 5/ICD-10, SCID, MINI) as well as from assessment measures administered at baseline and follow-up, including the KIDSCREEN-27, Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire (SDQ), Parents’ Evaluations of Developmental Status (PEDS), Parenting Sense of Competence (PSOC), Resilience Scale for Adolescence (READ), Guilt and Shame Questionnaire for Adolescents of Parents with Mental Illness (GSQ-APMI), Mental Health Literacy Scale, and Parent–Child Communication Scale.
Results: The hypothesis is that there will be improvements of child behavioral and emotional problems, and outcomes in the project will be reported in terms of parent´s diagnosis, child behavioral and emotional problems, child wellbeing, family communication and functioning, as well as participants’ satisfaction.
Discussion: This multi-site international protocol will focus the attention of European scientific and policy makers toward COPMI. This young segment of the population is presently almost completely neglected in most European health policies, despite having a large burden of disability and being at risk of transgenerational transmission of psychopathology. We will further discuss the feasibility of a very brief intervention aiming at preventing mental disorders in young people.