Acceptability, engagement and exploratory outcomes and costs of a co-designed intervention to support children of parents with a mental illness: Mixed-methods evaluation and descriptive analysis.

Journal: International journal of mental health nursing

Volume: 

Issue: 

Year of Publication: 

Affiliated Institutions:  Care Policy and Evaluation Centre, London School of Economics and Political Science, London, UK. Clinical Child and Adolescent Psychology, Department of Psychology, Philipps University Marburg, Marburg, Germany. School of Rural Health, Monash University, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. Mental Health Research Program, The Village, Ludwig Boltzmann Gesellschaft, Wien, Austria. Institute for Health Technology Assessment GmbH, Wien, Austria. Division of Psychiatry I, Department of Psychiatry, Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics, Medical University Innsbruck, Innsbruck, Austria.

Abstract summary 

Children whose parents have a mental illness are much more likely to experience mental health problems and other adverse long-term impacts. Child-centred psychosocial interventions can be effective, but not much is known about how to design and implement them in different settings. A pre-post, mixed methods, single-arm evaluation of a co-designed social support intervention with parents and children (4-18 years) measured parents' mental health (PHQ-9), perceived social support (ENRICHD), parental self-efficacy (PSAM) and children's mental health (SDQ), quality of life (Kidscreen-27), and child service use (CAMHSRI-EU) at baseline and 6 months. Qualitative data were gathered at 6 months to explore parents' and children's experience with the intervention. Twenty-nine parents and 21 children completed baseline and follow-up questionnaires; 22 parents and 17 children participated in interviews. Parents' depression (MD -1.36, SD 8.08), perceived social support (MD 1, SD 5.91), and children's mental health potentially improved, and children's service use and costs potentially reduced (€224.6 vs. €122.2, MD 112.4). Parental self-efficacy was potentially reduced (MD -0.11, SD 3.33). The sample was too small to perform statistical analysis. Favourable themes emerged describing the high satisfaction with the intervention, parents' improved understanding of the impact of their mental health problems on children, and improvements in parent-child relationships. This study contributes to an emerging evidence base for co-designed child-centred interventions to prevent the transgenerational transmission of poor mental health.

Authors & Co-authors:  Bauer Cartagena-Farias Christiansen Goodyear Schamschula Zechmeister-Koss Paul

Study Outcome 

Source Link: Visit source

Statistics
Citations :  Abel, K.M., Hope, H., Swift, E., Parisi, R., Ashcroft, D.M., Kosidou, K. et al. (2019) Prevalence of maternal mental illness among children and adolescents in the UK between 2005 and 2017: a national retrospective cohort analysis. The Lancet Public Health, 4, e291-e300.
Authors :  7
Identifiers
Doi : 10.1111/inm.13324
SSN : 1447-0349
Study Population
Male,Female
Mesh Terms
Other Terms
child mental health;co-designed support;family mental health;mixed-method evaluation;prevention
Study Design
Study Approach
Qualitative,Mixed Methods
Country of Study
Publication Country
Australia