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Parent support for young people with mental illness Anne Honey Faculty of Health Sciences University of Sydney Contact anne.honey@sydney.edu.au Collaborators: Vikki Fraser, Sarah Alchin, Nicola Hancock, Gwynnyth Llewellyn
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Parents can be a critical support for young people with mental illness E.g., Getting treatment Emotional support Environment Parent interventions Background
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Parent support project 26 young people (15-24 y.o.) 32 parents 28 families: 22 matched But what do parents actually DO?
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Method ›In-depth interviews (separate) ›Constant comparative analysis (Glaser, 1978)
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Parent support project 1.What do parents do to try to help and support a young person with a mental illness? (“practices”) 2.What practices are more (and less) helpful?
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What do parents do? ›78 distinct practices, each reflecting views of multiple participants Practice Types Practical assistance Personal interactions Environmental mgt Controlling Purposes/impacts Appropriate treatment Activities and behaviours Thoughts and feelings An ordinary life
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Example: Lela and Sonja
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Example: Appropriate treatment “She took me to heaps of doctors and stuff.” Practices Searching for appropriate professionals Making treatment attendance easy for the young person
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Example: Activities and behaviours “The computer, one hour... she knows.” Practices Using authority and insistence to influence behaviour
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Example: Thoughts and feelings “It always helps when they’re always smiling instead of being angry and loud”. Practices Staying calm/ withholding own negative emotions
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Example: An ordinary life “It’s a major part in my daughter’s wellbeing for her to look in the family and not [see] ‘oh my gosh, she’s crazy.’” Practices Explaining the situation to other people
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But that’s not all… Parents took action to improve their own: 1.Knowledge and understanding 2.Circumstances (in addition to the 78 practices)
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Helpfulness ›Young people’s views often changed over time -“I wouldn’t really change it, because it worked.” -“I thought at the time that wasn’t the right thing, but now I think it was the right thing.” ›Very difficult for parents to know -Multiple practices -Other influences -Short-term v long term
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Implications My thoughts ›Focus on parent practices rather than characteristics ›Opportunity for an evidence base -Wide range of practices used -Parents and young people can’t always assess helpfulness from experience -Parents seek information from a variety of sources Your thoughts?
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Implications Your thoughts?
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PUBLICATIONS ›Honey, A., Alchin, S. A., & Hancock, N. (2014). Promoting mental health and well- being for a young person with a mental illness: Parent occupations. Australian Occupational Therapy Journal, early online. doi: 10.1111/1440-1630.12111. ›Honey, A., Fraser, V., Llewellyn, G., Hazel, P., & Clark, S. (2013). Parental influence on the illness-related behavior of young people with mental illness: Young people's perceptions. Advances in Mental Health, 12(1) 63-74. ›anne.honey@sydney.edu.au
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