Factors that may Facilitate or Hinder a Family-focus in the Treatment of Parents With a Mental Illness
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/6089Dato
2014Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Sammendrag
Children with mentally ill parents are at risk of
developing mental health problems themselves. To
enhance early support for these children may prevent
mental health problems from being transmitted from one
generation to the next. The sample (N = 219) included
health professionals in a large university hospital, who
responded to a web-based survey on the routines of the
mental health services, attitudes within the workforce
capacity, worker’s knowledge on the impact of parental
mental illness on children, knowledge on legislation concerning
children of patients, experience, expectations for
possible outcomes of change in current clinical practice
and demographic variables. A total of 56 % reported that
they did not identify whether or not patients had children.
There were no significant differences between the groups
(identifiers and non-identifiers) except for the two scales
measuring aspects of knowledge, i.e., Knowledge Children
and Knowledge Legislation where workers who identified
children had higher scores. The results also showed that
younger workers with a medium level of education scored
higher on Positive Attitudes. Furthermore, workers who
reported to have more knowledge about children and the
impact of mental illness on the parenting role were less
concerned about a child-focussed approach interfering with
the patient-therapist relation.
Forlag
SpringerLinkSitering
Journal of Child and Family Studies (2014), online before printMetadata
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