Authors
Jennifer Power, Melinda Goodyear, Darryl Maybery, Andrea Reupert, Brendan O’Hanlon, Rose Cuff, Amaryll Perlesz
Publication date
2016/1
Journal
Journal of Social Work
Volume
16
Issue
1
Pages
66-82
Publisher
Sage Publications
Description
This study explores the concept of family resilience where a parent has a mental illness. Eleven Australian adults who have grown up in a household with a parent who had a diagnosed mental illness participated in an in-depth interview. The interviews focused on the ways in which these families responded to challenges in everyday life, particularly related to parental mental illness.
Findings
Families developed resilience through processes such as shared humour or regular family rituals and routines. In some cases, open communication about mental illness enabled families to better cope when parents were unwell and to build a greater sense of family connectedness. However, data suggest that parental mental illness potentially creates stress and confusion for families and there are multiple social and cultural barriers that make it difficult for families to acknowledge and speak openly about mental illness. For …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
J Power, M Goodyear, D Maybery, A Reupert… - Journal of Social Work, 2016