Stigma in relation to families living with parental mental illness: An integrative review
- PMID: 33283387
- DOI: 10.1111/inm.12820
Stigma in relation to families living with parental mental illness: An integrative review
Abstract
Stigma is a pervasive social mechanism with negative ramifications for people who experience mental illness. Less is known about the stigma experiences of families where a parent has a mental illness. This review aims to identify and synthesize evidence on the concept of stigma and stigma-related experiences and outcomes reported by parents and children living with parental mental illness. An integrative review method was employed, with PRISMA (Preferred Reporting Items of Systematic Review and Meta-Analyses) guidelines to search and select literature and extract and analyse data. This approach allows for inclusion of theoretical and empirical literature and for concept definition. Fifty-eight papers, mostly from the USA, Australia, and the UK, met the inclusion criteria. Stigma was primarily conceptualized in families as a marked difference that was negatively appraised, and which could be internalized. Some articles examined how underpinning assumptions could shape the behaviour of individuals and groups and be embedded within social institutions and structures. For parents, mental illness stigma was interconnected with stigma relating to perceived violations of social and cultural norms related to parenting. Children's experience of stigma resulted in bullying, embarrassment, guilt and social isolation, and efforts to conceal their parent's mental illness. One outcome was that stigma prevented children and parents from seeking much needed supports. Public health policies and campaigns that focus exclusively on promoting open disclosure of mental illness to foster community education outcomes are unlikely to be effective without additional strategies aimed at preventing and redressing the structural impacts of stigma for all family members.
Keywords: children; family; mental illness; parent; stigma.
© 2020 Australian College of Mental Health Nurses Inc.
Comment in
-
The quality assessment of studies in integrative reviews: A commentary on Reupert et al. (2021).Int J Ment Health Nurs. 2021 Aug;30(4):1033-1034. doi: 10.1111/inm.12882. Epub 2021 May 24. Int J Ment Health Nurs. 2021. PMID: 34028157 No abstract available.
References
-
- Ackerson, B. J. (2003). Coping with the dual demands of severe mental illness and parenting: The parents' perspective. Families in Society, 84, 109-118.
-
- Angermeyer, M. C., Schulze, B. & Dietrich, S. (2003). Courtesy stigma-a focus group study of relatives of schizophrenia patients. Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology, 38, 593-602.
-
- Bartsch, D., Roberts, R. M., Davies, M. & Proeve, M. (2016). Understanding the experience of parents with a diagnosis of borderline personality disorder. Australian Psychologist, 51, 472-480.
-
- Behague, D. P., Goncalves, H. D., Gigante, D. & Kirkwood, B. R. (2012). Taming troubled teens: the social production of mental morbidity amongst young mothers in Pelotas, Brazil. Social Science & Medicine, 74, 434-443.
-
- Benders-Hadi, Nikole, Barber, Mary & Alexander, Mary Jane (2013). Motherhood in women with serious mental illness. Psychiatric Quarterly, 84, 65-72.
Publication types
MeSH terms
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Medical
Miscellaneous
