2008
DOI: 10.1080/10522150802441825
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Parenting Among Mothers With Bipolar Disorder: Strengths, Challenges, and Service Needs

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Cited by 33 publications
(29 citation statements)
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“…Overall, children's experiences of living with a parent with mental illness reveal a balancing of the parent's needs with their own, and an attempt to find ways to handle daily life both emotionally and practically in order to reduce family stress (Gladstone, Boydell, Seeman, & McKeever, 2011). Parental mental illness fluctuates and can therefore periodically reduce the capability of parenting (Venkataraman & Ackerson, 2008). Moreover, many parents with mental illness have thoughts and worries about their children that they want to discuss with professionals (Perera et al, 2014), but at the same time, they fear talking about their children due to the perceived risk of losing custody of them (Price-Robertson, Reupert, & Maybery, 2015).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Overall, children's experiences of living with a parent with mental illness reveal a balancing of the parent's needs with their own, and an attempt to find ways to handle daily life both emotionally and practically in order to reduce family stress (Gladstone, Boydell, Seeman, & McKeever, 2011). Parental mental illness fluctuates and can therefore periodically reduce the capability of parenting (Venkataraman & Ackerson, 2008). Moreover, many parents with mental illness have thoughts and worries about their children that they want to discuss with professionals (Perera et al, 2014), but at the same time, they fear talking about their children due to the perceived risk of losing custody of them (Price-Robertson, Reupert, & Maybery, 2015).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Five [ 32 - 36 ] of the 13 studies were based in the US, four [ 37 - 40 ] in Canada, three [ 41 - 43 ] in the UK, and one [ 44 ] in Japan. All of the studies used interviews to generate data, including semi-structured (n = 5) [ 33 , 34 , 36 , 38 , 39 ], in depth (n = 2) [ 35 , 40 ] and narrative (n = 2) [ 37 , 43 ]. In the remaining four studies [ 32 , 41 - 43 ], the type of interview was not specified.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In a review, Howard and Underdown [36] pointed to a wide range of complex health and social care needs: optimal counseling regarding medication in women during pregnancy and breastfeeding, antenatal care to reduce adverse obstetric and psychiatric outcomes, early referrals to social/child services, and specific programs to enhance parenting abilities. In qualitative studies mothers expressed a need for long-term support in their homes by someone visiting to provide practical help with parenting and to talk about difficulties, crisis services, continuous support by self-help groups, family meetings, help with discipline and handling behavioral problems in children, support through leisure and group activities, and support for children in adult mental health services [18,22]. In qualitative studies mothers expressed a need for long-term support in their homes by someone visiting to provide practical help with parenting and to talk about difficulties, crisis services, continuous support by self-help groups, family meetings, help with discipline and handling behavioral problems in children, support through leisure and group activities, and support for children in adult mental health services [18,22].…”
Section: Parenting Needsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Many parents with mental illness experience everyday parenting problems, including difficulties in starting communication with children about their mental illness, problems in ensuring discipline, maintaining boundaries and loss of control, swings in parenting behavior, impaired parenting abilities due to illness symptoms, or medication side-effects and feelings of guilt, shame, and fear regarding adverse illness effects on children [14,15,21,22]. In a recent narrative analysis, mothers' experiences of 'hitting bottom' were considered most stressful in the context of overwhelming circumstances [23].…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%