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Bildens yta och djup. Grunder för en bildsemiotik

Sonesson, G. (2001)

Man kan urskilja två ursprung till bildsemiotiken, dels ur försöker att avleda en modell ur studiet av enskilda bilder, som växer fram ur kritiken av Barthes första, enligt allakompetenta bedömare ganska misslyckade försök med utgångspunkt i en reklambild; och dels ur kritiken av Peirces ikonicitetsbegrepp hos Bierman, Lindekens och Eco och av det vardagliga bildbegreppet grundat på likhet hos Goodman, som också bygger påmånga missförstånd. I denna artikel diskuteras i viss mån den första traditionen, men huvuddelen ägnas åt den andra. En ny teori på fenomenologisk grundval angående den speciella form av ikonicitet som förekommer i bilder lägges fram, och denna ikonicitetkontrasteras med andra typer. En allmän indelning i primär och sekundär ikonicitet föreslages.

Bildens yta och djup. Grunder för en bildsemiotik

Sonesson, G. (2001)

Man kan urskilja två ursprung till bildsemiotiken, dels ur försöker att avleda en modell ur studiet av enskilda bilder, som växer fram ur kritiken av Barthes första, enligt allakompetenta bedömare ganska misslyckade försök med utgångspunkt i en reklambild; och dels ur kritiken av Peirces ikonicitetsbegrepp hos Bierman, Lindekens och Eco och av det vardagliga bildbegreppet grundat på likhet hos Goodman, som också bygger påmånga missförstånd. I denna artikel diskuteras i viss mån den första traditionen, men huvuddelen ägnas åt den andra. En ny teori på fenomenologisk grundval angående den speciella form av ikonicitet som förekommer i bilder lägges fram, och denna ikonicitetkontrasteras med andra typer. En allmän indelning i primär och sekundär ikonicitet föreslages.

Bipolär sjukdom – ur ett existensiellt perspektiv [Akademisk avhandling].

Rusner M. (2012)

Aim: The overall aim was to create knowledge about what it means to live with bipolar
disorder from an existential perspective, both for individuals with the diagnosis and for
their close relatives.
Method: An existential perspective in this context entails that it is explored and
described from a lifeworld perspective of individuals who in various ways experience
that which is termed as bipolar disorder. The lifeworld phenomenological approach
Reflective Lifeworld Research (RLR) was used in the four empirical studies. Meaningoriented
interviews and analysis were conducted following the leading methodological
principles of the chosen scientific approach. A synthesis, based on lifeworld
hermeneutic existential philosophy, then presents how it is possible to understand the
perspective of individuals with bipolar disorder and their close relatives as a coherent
whole.
Findings and conclusions: A magnitude and complexity of experiencing, which means
that life with bipolar disorder is characterized by extra dimensions, specific tension and
contradictions, has been elucidated. Knowledge of the meaning of these aspects
enables for the persons with the illness and for their close relatives to understand, to
put words to, and to communicate how their life is and what they need, which in turn
enhances their ability to influence their lives. It also increases the opportunities for
professional caregivers to develop care, both in content and organization, so that it can
meet the actual needs of those concerned in an adequate way.
Living with bipolar disorder means so much more than the usual description with
changes between episodes of depression and mania. The diagnosis "bipolar disorder"
thus appears to be an inadequate label that only reflects the more obvious and visible
dimensions of the illness, while those that characterize life in its entirety remain
hidden.
The thesis also shows that the importance of the common everyday life of persons with
bipolar disorder and their close relatives should be highlighted as the most important
factor in a liveable existence. A change in the view of mental health care is thus
needed; a change that is characterized by consensus, collaboration and transparent
communication between the person with the illness, their close relatives and mental
health care. The common goal should be about meeting actual needs, and to
strengthen a profound connectedness in order to make everyday life more liveable.

Blended learning networks supported by information and communication technology: An intervention for knowledge transformation within family care of older people

Hanson E, Magnusson L, Sennemark E. (2011)

Purpose: This article describes an innovative practice called Blended Learning Networks (BLNs) whose aim is to enable older people, their families, and care providers to exchange knowledge, learn together, and support each other in local development work so that care is improved for older people. BLNs were established in 31 municipalities, headed up by a local facilitator. They were supported by a national themed network consisting of virtual meetings between local facilitators and national facilitators at the Swedish National Family Care Competence Centre. Design and Methods: An evaluation was conducted to explore the utility of the BLNs so that any improvements to the model could be instigated. Focus group interviews were conducted with members of 9 BLNs, and self-evaluation questions were discussed in 16 BLNs. Limitations are that not all BLN members participated in the evaluation, and local facilitators conducting self-evaluations were not trained in focus group dynamics. Virtual focus groups were carried out with 26 of the 31 local facilitators and with the national facilitators. Results: Participants reported an increased understanding of caregiver issues and of each group's roles. Of particular value were the stories shared by caregivers and the potential for change locally due to the involvement of decision makers. The practice demanded considerable skills of the local facilitators. An initial education for new local facilitators was deemed necessary. Implications: BLNs is a unique practice of community communications and knowledge transfer as it creates partnerships among all key stakeholder groups that act as a catalyst for improving care for older people.

Blended learning networks supported by information and communication technology: An intervention for knowledge transformation within family care of older people

Hanson E, Magnusson L, Sennemark E. (2011)

Purpose: This article describes an innovative practice called Blended Learning Networks (BLNs) whose aim is to enable older people, their families, and care providers to exchange knowledge, learn together, and support each other in local development work so that care is improved for older people. BLNs were established in 31 municipalities, headed up by a local facilitator. They were supported by a national themed network consisting of virtual meetings between local facilitators and national facilitators at the Swedish National Family Care Competence Centre. Design and Methods: An evaluation was conducted to explore the utility of the BLNs so that any improvements to the model could be instigated. Focus group interviews were conducted with members of 9 BLNs, and self-evaluation questions were discussed in 16 BLNs. Limitations are that not all BLN members participated in the evaluation, and local facilitators conducting self-evaluations were not trained in focus group dynamics. Virtual focus groups were carried out with 26 of the 31 local facilitators and with the national facilitators. Results: Participants reported an increased understanding of caregiver issues and of each group's roles. Of particular value were the stories shared by caregivers and the potential for change locally due to the involvement of decision makers. The practice demanded considerable skills of the local facilitators. An initial education for new local facilitators was deemed necessary. Implications: BLNs is a unique practice of community communications and knowledge transfer as it creates partnerships among all key stakeholder groups that act as a catalyst for improving care for older people.

Bloodlines: from ethnic pride to ethnic terrorism

Volkan, V. (1997)

In the wake of recent conflicts in Russia and the former Yugoslavia, ethnic terrorism and ethnic cleansing have become household words. Yet we are at a loss to find solutions to such struggles. In Bloodlines, Vamik Volkan, a world-renowned psychiatrist specializing in international relations, explores ethnic violence by examining history and diplomacy through a psycho-analytic lens.Dr. Volkan leads the reader on investigative tours of battlegrounds in the Middle East, Russia, Turkey, Cyprus, the Baltics, and the Balkans. In Serbia, he discovers that the Battle of Kosovo, fought in 1389, is the rallying cry for modern nationalists, who view the past as prophecy. In Turkey, PKK terrorist leader Apo reveals that he still considers himself an unloved child and orders his army of Kurdish women to remain virgins because of his own disgust with "unclean" adult behavior. In Latvia, after the dissolution of the USSR, Dr. Volkan learns that ethnic Latvians plan to disinter corpses and segregate cemeteries in an attempt to establish a national identity separate from that of Russia. Drawing on a variety of disciplines, Dr. Volkan analyzes these issues of identity formation, perceived versus real threats, the persistence of past traumas, and the desire for revenge.The result is a work that lays the foundation for understanding the differences between ethnic groups as well as the common ground they share. Timely, brilliant, and gripping, Bloodlines gives fascinating insights into how personal identity intertwines with nationality, and why hatred of others becomes a part of our sense of self.

Blunda och räkna till hundra

Pernilla Soland (2021)

Sammanfattning:
Boken berör ämnen som är högaktuella 2021, inte minst i relation till den ökning av postvirala sjukdomar vi lär få se i covids kölvatten. Berättelsen tar sin start i den pandemi som nu rasar kring oss.
Redan innan vår nya samtid drabbade oss fick dottern Linnea ett virus som inte släppte sitt grepp. Snart fick hon nya märkliga symtom. Ändå slog hennes läkare lugnt fast att barn kunde råka ut för postviral trötthet, något som skulle gå över med tiden. Men Linnea blev bara sämre. Likt en inkräktare trängde sig en okänd sjukdom in i familjens trygga liv på Gotland. Sjukdomen visade sig vara lika svår att göra sig av med som att lära känna - mardrömmen blev verklighet.

I boken får vi följa föräldrarnas kamp för att rädda dottern. Samtidigt faller de som anhörigvårdare genom revorna i välfärdens redan grovmaskiga nät. Med ett särpräglat språk som når ända in i själen skildras utmaningar och sorger vi alla kan drabbas av när någon vi älskar blir allvarligt sjuk.

Boende utanför det egna hemmet-placeringsformer för barn och unga. Delbetänkande av Utredningen om tvångsvård för barn och unga

SOU (2014)

Regeringen beslutade den 12 juli 2012 att tillkalla en särskild utredare med uppdrag att göra en översyn av lagen (1990:52) med särskilda bestämmelser om vård av unga (LVU). Av direktiven framgår att även vissa frågor som rör socialtjänstlagen (2001:453, SoL) ingår i uppdraget (dir. 2012:79). Syftet är att ytterligare stärka barnrättsperspektivet och rättssäkerheten för barn och unga.

Genom tilläggsdirektiv, beslutade den 19 juni 2013, har utredningen dessutom fått uppdraget att se över olika placeringsalternativ för barns och ungas boende, vård och fostran enligt SoL och LVU och att lämna förslag till flera alternativ än vad som finns i dag.

Detta delbetänkande innehåller förslag i enlighet med tilläggsdirektiven. Därutöver behandlas vissa frågor som ingår i utredningens ursprungliga direktiv.

Breaking the Cycle of Addiction: Prevention and Intervention With Children of Alcoholics

Price AW, Emshoff JG. (1997)

Children of alcoholics (COA's) are at increased risk for behavioral and emotional problems, including alcoholism. Research has helped guide the design of prevention and intervention programs aimed at reducing this risk. Currently, most such programs for COA's use a short-term, small-group format, often conducted within schools. Broad-based community programs are another promising option, but have not been sufficiently studied. Generally, interventions include alcoholism education, training in coping skills and social competence, social support, and healthy alternative activities. Increased interaction between basic research and intervention may lead to improved services for COA's.

Brief alcoholic screening and intervention for college students. A harm reduction approach

Dimeff LA, Baer JS, Kivlahan DR, Marlatt GA. (1999)

BASICS, Brief Alcohol Screening and Intervention of College Students: A Harm Reduction Approach, is a preventive intervention for college students 18 to 24 years old. It targets students who drink alcohol heavily and have experienced or are at risk for alcohol-related problems such as poor class attendance, missed assignments, accidents, sexual assault, and violence. BASICS is designed to help students make better alcohol-use decisions based on a clear understanding of the genuine risks associated with problem drinking. The program is conducted over the course of two brief interviews that prompt students to change their drinking patterns. The first interview focuses on introducing the student to the program, assessing the student's level of risk of alcohol-related problems, and obtaining the commitment to monitor drinking in the interval between the two sessions. The second interview is a feedback interview in which the student is given a personalized feedback sheet containing information on the frequency of drinking, quantity of alcohol consumed, estimates of typical and highest-reported blood-alcohol content, and comparisons with student drinking norms. In addition, the student is provided with information about risks associated with drinking and myths about alcohol use, and receives advice on how to drink safely. The program's style is empathetic, not confrontational or judgmental, and aims to (1) reduce alcohol consumption and its adverse consequences, (2) promote healthier choices among young adults, and (3) provide important information and coping skills for risk reduction.

OUTCOMES
Participants at the University of Washington who received BASICS demonstrated a significantly greater deceleration of drinking rates and problems over time in comparison with control participants. These results were sustained at the 2- and 4-year follow-ups.
In an introductory psychology class study of binge drinking, at the 6-week follow-up, the treatment group drank significantly less than the control group on all three indices (number of drinks consumed per week, number of times consuming alcohol in the past month, and frequency of binge drinking in the past month).
Heavier drinking BASICS participants at Auburn University showed significantly greater 3-month decreases in drinking measures and maintained the reduction at 9 months, but other participants showed no improvement.
Fraternity pledges in the treatment condition in a West Coast university showed greater decreases in total weekly alcohol consumption and typical peak blood alcohol concentrations than did pledges in the control condition, but no significant treatment effects were found for quantity of drinks per occasion, frequency of alcohol consumption, or alcohol problems.
Among a sample of athletes enrolled in a public northeastern and northwestern university, BASICS significantly lowered the levels of peak blood alcohol concentration as well as the numbers of drinks consumed on a typical weekend during the first year of college. The program appeared to work somewhat better in combination with a parent-based intervention.
Significant Program Effects on Risk and Protective Factors:

Perceptions of typical student drinking was found to mediate the treatment effect on drinking outcomes (number of drinks consumed per week, number of times consuming alcohol past month, and past month frequency of binge drinking) (Borsari and Carey, 2000).
RACE/ETHNICITY/GENDER DETAILS
The program applies to all youth, but the samples of college students likely include few minorities. The program is equally effective for both genders.

Brief alcoholic screening and intervention for college students. A harm reduction approach

Dimeff LA, Baer JS, Kivlahan DR, Marlatt GA. (1999)

This instructive manual presents a pragmatic and clinically proven approach to the prevention and treatment of undergraduate alcohol abuse. The BASICS model is a nonconfrontational harm reduction approach that helps students reduce their alcohol consumption and decrease the behavioral and health risks associated with heavy drinking. Including numerous reproducible handouts and assessment forms, the book takes readers step by step through conducting BASICS assessment and feedback sessions. Special topics include the use of DSM-IV criteria to evaluate alcohol abuse, ways to counter student defensiveness about drinking, and obtaining additional treatment for students with severe alcohol dependency.

Brief family intervention effects on adolescent substance initiation: school-level growth curve analyses 6 years following baseline.

Spoth R, Redmond C, Shin C, Azevedo K. (2004)

This study examines the effects of 2 brief family-focused interventions on the trajectories of substance initiation over a period of 6 years following a baseline assessment. The 2 interventions, designed for general-population families of adolescents, were the 7-session Iowa Strengthening Families Program (ISFP) (Molgaard & Spoth, 2001) and the 5-session Preparing for the Drug Free Years Program (PDFY) (Catalano, Kosterman, Haggerty, Hawkins, & Spoth, 1999). Thirty-three rural public schools were randomly assigned to the ISFP, the PDFY, or a minimal-contact control condition. The authors evaluated the curvilinear growth observed in school-level measures of initiation using a logistic growth curve analysis. Alcohol and tobacco composite use indices--as well as lifetime use of alcohol, cigarettes, and marijuana--and lifetime drunkenness, were examined. Significant intervention-control differences were observed, indicating favorable delays in initiation in the intervention groups.

Brief report: Behavioral adjustment of siblings of children with autism.

Hastings RP. (2003)

Existing research studies have shown mixed results relating to the impact upon children of having a sibling with a disability. However, siblings of children with autism may be more at risk than siblings of children with other disabilities. In the present study, data were gathered on 22 siblings of children with autism. These children were rated by their mothers as having more behavior problems and fewer prosocial behaviors than a normative sample. Analysis of variables predicting sibling behavioral adjustment revealed that boys with siblings who have autism, and also those younger than their sibling with autism, engaged in fewer prosocial behaviors. Psychological adjustment of mothers (stress) and the child with autism (behavior problems) were not predictive of sibling behavioral adjustment.

Brief Report: Family-Based Group Intervention for Yong Siblings of Children with Chronic Illness and Developmental Disability

Lobato, Debra, J. & Kao, Barbara, T. (2005)

Objective To evaluate the impact of a family-based group intervention for young siblings of children with chronic illness and developmental disability (CI/DD). Methods Forty-three healthy siblings (ages 4–7 years) of children with CI/DD and their parents participated in an intervention designed to address sibling challenges that cut across types of diagnostic conditions. The intervention consisted of six sessions of collateral and integrated sibling-parent groups. Measures of sibling knowledge, sibling sense of connectedness with other children in similar family circumstances, and sibling global functioning were collected before and after intervention. A subsample of 17 families completed a 3-month follow-up. Results Siblings' knowledge of the child's disorder and sibling connectedness increased significantly from pre- to posttreatment for both boys and girls, regardless of the nature of the brother or sister's condition. Sibling perceptions of self-competence increased from pre- to posttreatment, whereas parent reports of sibling behavioral functioning remained within the normal range. Improvements in sibling knowledge and connectedness maintained at follow-up. Parent satisfaction with the program was high. Conclusions Results support more controlled evaluations of family-based intervention to improve young sibling adaptation to CI/DD.

Brief Strategic Family Therapy versus community control: engagement, retention, and an exploration of the moderating role of adolescent symptom severity

Coatsworth JD, Santisteban DA, McBride CK, Szapocznik J. (2001)

This study extends a program of research investigating the effectiveness of Brief Strategic Family Therapy to engage and retain families and/or youth in treatment. The study contrasted Brief Strategic Family Therapy (BSFT) with a Community Comparison (CC) condition selected to represent the common engagement and treatment practices of the community; 104 families were randomly assigned to BSFT or CC. Results indicate that families assigned to BSFT had significantly higher rates of engagement (81% vs. 61%), and retention (71% vs. 42%). BSFT was also more effective than CC in retaining more severe cases. Post hoc analyses of treatment effectiveness suggest that BSFT was able to achieve comparable treatment effects despite retaining more difficult cases. We discuss these results from a public health perspective, and highlight the study's contribution to a small but growing body of literature that suggests the benefits of a family-systems paradigm for engagement and retention in treatment.

Brief Strategic Family Therapy versus community control: engagement, retention, and an exploration of the moderating role of adolescent symptom severity

Coatsworth JD, Santisteban DA, McBride CK, Szapocznik J. (2001)

This study extends a program of research investigating the effectiveness of Brief Strategic Family Therapy to engage and retain families and/or youth in treatment. The study contrasted Brief Strategic Family Therapy (BSFT) with a Community Comparison (CC) condition selected to represent the common engagement and treatment practices of the community; 104 families were randomly assigned to BSFT or CC. Results indicate that families assigned to BSFT had significantly higher rates of engagement (81% vs. 61%), and retention (71% vs. 42%). BSFT was also more effective than CC in retaining more severe cases. Post hoc analyses of treatment effectiveness suggest that BSFT was able to achieve comparable treatment effects despite retaining more difficult cases. We discuss these results from a public health perspective, and highlight the study's contribution to a small but growing body of literature that suggests the benefits of a family-systems paradigm for engagement and retention in treatment.

Bringing birth-related paternal depression to the fore

Schumacher, M., Zubaran, C. & White, G. (2008)

OBJECTIVES:
Maternal postpartum depression is a prevalent health disorder with important consequences to the family and child development. Research evidence demonstrates that fathers can also suffer from psychological distress in the postpartum period and that paternal depression has a detrimental effect on the child's behavioral and emotional development. This study aims to review the current literature available about birth-related paternal depression.
METHOD:
A literature search from 1980 to 2007 was conducted through Medline electronic database, using the following Mesh terms: postpartum, postnatal, depression, fathers and paternal. Studies on maternal postpartum depression that examined issues related to paternal depression were also selected.
RESULTS:
Understanding about paternal depressive disorders during the postnatal period has advanced considerably in the last decade. Various studies demonstrate that birth-related paternal depression is a significant problem and closely associated with maternal depressive symptoms. Children of depressive fathers are also at risk for emotional and behavioral problems.
CONCLUSIONS:
Men may suffer from psychological distress after childbirth and birth-related paternal depression is not a rare phenomenon. Since this disorder, also called 'paternal postpartum depression', presents potential deleterious effects for the child, an increased level of public health awareness and scientific interest is warranted. In addition, a more detailed assessment of fathers during the postnatal period is recommended, especially when their partners are also depressed, so that the condition will be promptly recognized and treated.

Brukarmakt – i teori och praktik

Karlsson, Magnus & Börjeson, Martin (2011)

Brukarmakt i teori och praktik fördjupar, problematiserar och breddar diskussionen om brukarnas inflytande i människovårdande verksamheter. Utgångspunkten är det socialpsykiatriska området, men boken ger redskap för att förstå brukarmakt i vidare mening inom socialtjänst, vård och omsorg.

Brukarnas makt och delaktighet diskuteras i relation till begrepp som demokrati, medborgarskap och sociala rättigheter, liksom till evidensbaserat socialt arbete. Historiska beskrivningar och teori kompletteras med exempel från praktiken. Även brukarorganisationernas roll analyseras.

Boken är avsedd som kurslitteratur vid utbildningar med inriktning mot vård, omsorg och socialt arbete, men kan också användas av anställda inom offentlig sektor och engagerade i ideella organisationer och föreningar.

Bråd död när patienten drabbats av stroke : vårdares och närståendes upplevelser

Rejnö, Å. (2012)

A large number of people die from stroke every year, many of them suddenly and unexpectedly as a result of acute stroke. Sudden and unexpected death influences the next of kin and carers as well as the care given to the patients but has not previous been studied within the context of stroke. Aim: The overall aim of the thesis was to describe how carers and next of kin experience patients' death when the patient has been afflicted by stroke. Methods: In the thesis an interpretive qualitative approach has mainly been used. The studies (I-V) have emerged from one another as in a hermeneutic design. An inductive design (I, II, IV, V) and a deductive design (III) have been used. Data were collected with individual interviews (I, III, IV) and individual interviews together with a form (III). Focus group interviews have also been used (II). Participants have been carers on stroke units; ten registered nurses (I) and nineteen respective fifteen members of stroke teams; physicians, registered nurses and enrolled nurses (II, III) together with twelve next of kin to eight patients (IV, V). For analysis of data mainly interpretive methods were utilized; hermeneutic textual interpretation (I), interpretive content analysis (II) and a combined qualitative and quantitative content analysis (III). In addition narrative thematic analysis (IV) and narrative structural analysis (V) were also used. Results: Unexpected sudden death when the patient has been afflicted by stroke can be understood as the unexpected force that intervenes without the patient, the next of kin or the carers being prepared (I). The sudden onset puts the carers in ethically demanding situations through the demands of immediate caring for the patient and also the support the next of kin needs, required by the urgent incident (I - III). The ethical problems became most evident in information, decisions about care and caring, together with support for the next of kin (II). The carers did not use ways of handling ethically problematic situations in the same way as they would have preferred. Mutual trust, both within the teams and with the next of kin constitutes the core for the carers ways of handling the urgent situation and the ethical problems guided by putting what's best for the patients first (III). The studies with the next of kin reveal how complex and elusive the situation might be perceived. The next of kin's experiences of the unexpected sudden death were marked by the uncertainty in the situation and to be left to the mercy of the unexpected (IV). The attention of the next of kin was clearly directed to the patient to the extent that they even forgot themselves and their own needs. The urgency shows itself as influencing the way the next of kin experienced time, how their attention was directed during vigil but it also affected their memory so it behaved in a betraying and contradictory way (IV). Conclusion: Through the results death caused by acute stroke emerge as unexpected sudden death. Unexpected sudden death shows as death calling for urgent actions, brings a potential power to violate the dignity of the afflicted, creating ethical problems that the carers have to deal with and have the power to completely invade the next of kin's present life. The unexpected sudden death brings with it an element of uncertainty that all involved in the situation, the patient, their next of kin and the carers have to address themselves to. Bereavement counselling could be a way to support the next of kin. The methods of this thesis have given knowledge of narrative structure and how it can be utilized to develop stories could be used as a tool for caregivers support the next of kin. Keywords: carers, combined qualitative and quantitative content analysis, content analysis, dignity, hermeneutic textual analysis, narratives, next of kin, qualitative methods, sudden and unexpected death, uncertainty, stroke, stroke team

Bröderna Lejonhjärta, Bok från 6år

Astrid Lindgren. Bilder Ilon Wikland (1973)

Nangijala, där det ännu är lägereldarna och sagornas tid, det är dit man kommer när man dör. Det berättar Jonatan för sin bror Skorpan som ligger hemma i köket och hostar och är rädd för att dö. Men Jonatan säger att han inte behöver vara rädd, för de kommer att ses i Nangijala. Astrid Lindgrens saga om bröderna Lejonhjärta är en klassisk berättelse om liv och död, syskonkärlek och mod. Kapitelbok från 6 år.

Buller om huller i Mamma Grå

Hedberg, Jessica (2018)

Sammanfattning
Mamma är sig inte lik. Hon fräser, blir lätt arg och är alltid trött. Hon har blivit sjuk och behöver vila. Det är liksom huller om buller i huvudet på henne. I berättelsen får vi följa barnen Maxi och Lilla Lo som försöker förhålla sig till sin mammas mående. Är det deras fel att mamma är sjuk? Ska klumpen i magen någonsin försvinna? Det här är en berättelse som börjar i grått, men hur slutar det?

Burden in Schizophrenia Caregivers: Impact on Family Psychoeducation and Awerness of Patient Suicidality

McDonnell, G. Michael, Short, A. Robert, Berry, M. Christopher & Dyck, G. Dennis (2003)

Family caregivers of persons with schizophrenia and other psychotic disorders experience high levels of burden. Although a number of patient and caregiver predictors of burden have been identified, little research has investigated the contributions of patient depression, suicidal ideation, and substance abuse. In addition, family psychoeducation interventions have reduced patient symptoms, as well as inpatient treatment utilization; however, it is not known whether or not these interventions reduce family burden. This study- investigated predictors of family burden and tested to what degree multiple family group treatment (MFGT), relative to a standard-care condition, was associated with reduced family burden. Participants were 90 outpatients with a diagnosis of schizophrenia or other psychotic disorders, and their caregivers who were enrolled in a 2 year psychoeducation intervention. The best set of predictors of burden, identified by stepwise linear regression, was young patient age, awareness of patient's suicidal ideation, and family resources. These variables accounted for 32% of the total variance in burden. Findings suggest that caregiver's awareness of patient's suicidal ideation; not patient's report of suicidal ideation; and that patient age not duration of the illness, were significant, independent predictors of burden. When compared to a standard-care condition over 2 years, MFGT did not reduce family caregiver burden. Discussions focus on the relationship between burden and its predictors, and possible reasons why MFGT did not decrease burden. Modifications are proposed that may increase the impact of MFGT.

Burden of Caregivers of Patients With Bipolar Affective disorders

Bauer, R., Gottfriedsen, G.-U., Binder, H., Dobmeier, M., Cording, C., Hajak, G., & Spiessl, H. (2012)

Thirty-two problem-oriented interviews with caregivers of patients with bipolar affective disorders were analyzed using content analysis. The 722 statements of caregivers about their experiences of subjective burden because of the illness of their family members were summarized in 49 global statements and correlated by factor analysis to 10 types of burden. In particular, patients' noncompliance as well as the helplessness of the caregivers in interaction with the (changing) depressive and manic symptoms of the ill family members emerged as serious burdens on the caregivers. Whereas female caregivers suffered more from problems regarding quality of relationship with the patient, male caregivers experienced more constraints on their own autonomy, uncertainty concerning their judgment of patients' capacity, and uncertainty because of the changing symptoms of illness. The findings of this study highlight that an appreciation of caregivers' own consternation and information about how best to handle the (uncooperative) behavior of the patient should be taken into account in psychoeducational groups as well as in the daily work routine of professionals.

Burden of informal care giving to patients with psychoses: a descriptive and methodological study

Flyckt L, Löthman A, Jörgensen L, Rylander A, Koernig T. (2013)

Background:

There is a lack of studies of the size of burden associated with informal care giving in psychosis.

Aims:

To evaluate the objective and subjective burden of informal care giving to patients with psychoses, and to compare a diary and recall method for assessments of objective burden.

Method:

Patients and their informal caregivers were recruited from nine Swedish psychiatric outpatient centres. Subjective burden was assessed at inclusion using the CarerQoL and COPE index scales. The objective burden (time and money spent) was assessed by the caregivers daily using diaries over four weeks and by recall at the end of weeks 1 and 2.

Results:

One-hundred and seven patients (53% females; mean age 43 ± 11) and 118 informal caregivers (67%; 58 ± 15 years) were recruited. Informal caregivers spent 22.5 hours/week and about 14% of their gross income on care-related activities. The time spent was underestimated by two to 20 hours when assessed by recall than by daily diary records. The most prominent aspects of the subjective burden were mental problems.

Conclusion:

Despite a substantial amount of time and money spent on care giving, the informal caregivers perceived the mental aspects of burden as the most troublesome. The informal caregiver burden is considerable and should be taken into account when evaluating effects of health care provided to patients with psychoses.

Keywords: Informal care giving, schizophrenia, subjective burden, objective burden, diary method, recall method

Burdens and difficulties experienced by caregivers of children and adolescents with schizophrenia‐spectrum disorders: A qualitative study

Knock J, Kline E, Schiffman J, Maynard A, Reeves G. (2011)

Aim: The purpose of this qualitative study was to investigate the burdens and difficulties associated with the experience of caring for youth with schizophrenia-spectrum disorders. Methods: Ten caregivers participated in a modified version of the Knowledge about Schizophrenia Illness interview. Results: The most common areas of general difficulties reported by caregivers were emotional burdens and the everyday practical demands and sacrifices required in caring for their dependents. Results also suggested high levels of burden for caregivers concerning difficulties with mental health services. Conclusion: Additional work is needed to learn more about the challenges that caregivers of youth with schizophrenia-spectrum disorders are facing, as well as to develop empirically based strategies for helping these caregivers and their dependents.

Burdens and difficulties experienced by caregivers of children and adolescents with schizophrenia‐spectrum disorders: A qualitative study

Knock J, Kline E, Schiffman J, Maynard A, Reeves G. (2011)

Aim: The purpose of this qualitative study was to investigate the burdens and difficulties associated with the experience of caring for youth with schizophrenia-spectrum disorders.

Methods: Ten caregivers participated in a modified version of the Knowledge about Schizophrenia Illness interview.

Results: The most common areas of general difficulties reported by caregivers were emotional burdens and the everyday practical demands and sacrifices required in caring for their dependents. Results also suggested high levels of burden for caregivers concerning difficulties with mental health services.

Conclusion: Additional work is needed to learn more about the challenges that caregivers of youth with schizophrenia-spectrum disorders are facing, as well as to develop empirically based strategies for helping these caregivers and their dependents.

By their own young hands: Delibirate self-harm and suicid ideas.

Hawton K, Rodham K, Evans E. (2006)

Self-harm in adolescents is an increasingly recognized problem, and there is growing awareness of the important role schools and health services can play in detecting and supporting those at risk. By Their Own Young Hand explores the findings of the first large-scale survey of deliberate self-harm and suicidal thinking in adolescents in the UK, and draws out the implications for prevention strategies and mental health promotion.

Six thousand young people were asked about their experiences of self-harm, the coping methods they use, and their attitudes to the help and support available. The authors identify the risk and protective factors for self-harm, exploring why some adolescents with suicidal thoughts go on to harm themselves while others do not, what motivates some young people to seek help, and whether distressed teenagers feel they receive the support they need. By Their Own Young Hand offers practical advice on how schools can detect young people at risk, cope with the aftermath of self-harm or attempted suicide, and develop training programmes for teachers. It also examines the roles of self-help, telephone helplines, email counselling, and walk-in crisis centres.

Packed with adolescents' own personal accounts and perspectives, this accessible overview will be essential reading for teachers, social workers and mental health professionals.

Bygga och använda språk : Bliss i AKK

Heister Trygg, Boel (2009)

Boken presenterar blissanvändare i olika åldrar och på olika språkliga nivåer. Den vill ge inspiration att prova blisspråket också där det inte är alldeles givet. Författaren försöker bland annat att ge svar på frågor som: Varför bliss? Hur ser blisspråket ut? Hur väljer man symboler och bygger upp en blisstavla?

Can I tell you about Bipolar Disorder? A Guide for Friends, Family and Professionals

Mainstone-Cotton Sonia (2018)

Läsålder
6-9 år
Illustratör/Fotograf Jon Birch

If a grownup you love has bipolar disorder, what does that mean? In this friendly guide, 11-year-old Josh tells all about his dad's bipolar, including what mental illness is, and how it can affect patients and their families. The guide explains in child-friendly terms how different types of bipolar affect people's feelings and behaviour. It is a comforting book that prepares young readers for the hard parts of knowing someone with bipolar, while communicating that bipolar is nothing to be afraid or ashamed of. Providing an excellent starting point for discussion both at home and in the classroom, it also includes a helpful list of recommended sources for additional support.

Can rehabilitation in the home setting reduce the burden of care for the next-of-kin of stroke victims?

Björkdahl A, Nilsson AL, Sunnerhagen KS. (2007)

BACKGROUND:
More evidence of the efficacy of caregiver interventions is needed. The aim of this study was to evaluate whether counselling in the home setting reduces the caregiver burden.
METHODS:
Thirty-six patients after stroke, median age 53 years, with a close family member, were selected for an evaluation of the burden of care and 35 participated. They were part of a randomized controlled trial, comparing rehabilitation in the home setting with outpatient rehabilitation. In the home setting, counselling about the stroke and its consequences was included. Assessments with the Caregiver Burden scale were made at 3 weeks, 3 months and one year after discharge.
RESULTS:
The burden of the 2 groups did not differ. After the intervention, there was a tendency to a lower burden for the home setting. The burden for the home setting was then unchanged from 3 weeks to 1 year, while outpatient rehabilitation showed a reduced burden over time. For the home setting, significant correlations to activity level were seen after the intervention.
CONCLUSION:
A positive effect of counselling was seen, as the home setting burden tends to be lower after the intervention, while outpatient rehabilitation seems to adjust with time. The results suggest that counselling reduces burden and the remaining burden is associated with the patient's ability.

Cancer, a relational disease: exploring the needs of relatives to cancer patients

Sandén Ulrika, Nilsson Fredrik, Thulesius Hans, Hägglund Maria, Harrysson Lars (2019)

Abstract [en]
Purpose: In this qualitative interview study we investigated the experiences of family members to cancer patients. Our objective was to explore and to differentiate their needs from the needs of cancer patients.

Methods: Five focus groups and six individual narrative interviews with 17 family members to cancer patients in Sweden were conducted and compared with 19 cancer patient interviews. Our analysis was inspired by classic grounded theory.

Results: Family members to cancer patients expressed own morbidity connected to high stress levels and difficulties in recognizing own stress due to ongoing comparisons with the cancer patient. Family members were trapped in a momentary terror-like situation where they became their sick relative's safety net. A percieved inability to improve their loved one's well being contributed to a feeling of guilt. The longing for it all to end was encumbered with shame since the end included possible death.

Conclusions: By recognizing cancer as a disease striking both body and relationships, family members are given precedence over their own struggles, differentiated from the patient's experiences. We define differences in needs between cancer patients and family members. Family members to cancer patients may be supported in developing balancing strategies towards less stress, increased safety and moments of contentment.

Children living with Home Mechanical Ventilation: The everyday life experiences of the children, their siblings, parents and personal care assistants.

Israelsson-Skogsberg, Åsa (2019)

Dissertation

Aim: The overall aim of this thesis was to explore the everyday life experiences of living with Home Mechanical Ventilation (HMV) from the perspective of the children and their siblings, parents and personal care assistants. Methods: Study I describes the experiences of personal care assistants (PCA) working with a ventilator-assisted person at home, based on qualitative content analysis according to Elo and Kyngäs (2008), of 15 semi-structured interviews. Study II, using qualitative content analysis according to Graneheim and Lundman (2004), focuses on exploring everyday life experiences from the perspective of children and young people on HMV, by means of interviews with nine children and young people receiving HMV. Study III, using a phenomenological hermeneutical method, illuminates the everyday life experiences of siblings of children on HMV, based on ten interviews. Study IV explores HRQoL, family functioning and sleep in parents of children on HMV, based on self-reported questionnaires completed by 85 parents. Results: PCAs working with a person with HMV experienced a complex work situation entailing a multidimensional responsibility. They badly wanted more education, support, and an organisation of their daily work that functioned properly. Children with HMV had the feeling that they were no longer sick, which included having plans and dreams of a future life chosen by themselves. However, at the same time, there were stories of an extraordinary fragility associated with sensitivity to bacteria, battery charges and power outages. The siblings' stories mirror a duality: being mature, empathetic, and knowledgeable while simultaneously being worried, having concerns, taking a lot of responsibility, being forced to grow up fast, and having limited time and space with one's parents. Parents of children with HMV reported low HRQoL and family functioning in comparison with earlier research addressing parents of children with long-term conditions. One in four parents reported moderate or severe insomnia. Conclusion: Children receiving HMV may feel that they are fit and living an ordinary life, just like their healthy peers. At the same time the results of this thesis indicate that everyday life in the context of HMV is a fragile construct that in some respects resembles walking a tightrope. The fragility of the construct also affects the everyday lives of the families and the PCAs. Ort, förlag, år, upplaga, sidor Borås: Högskolan i Borås, 2019.SerieSkrifter från Högskolan i Borås, ISSN 0280-381X ; 101 Nyckelord [en] Home Mechanical Ventilation, children, siblings, parents, family, personal care assistants, health, family functioning, everyday life

Children of affectively ill parents: a review of the past 10 years

Beardslee W, Versage E, Gladstone T. (1998)

OBJECTIVE: To review the literature investigating the effects of parental affective illness on children over the past decade. METHOD: A computerized search of articles published over the past 10 years was completed. Articles were reviewed and relevant studies are presented. RESULTS: Over the course of the past 10 years a number of longitudinal studies have confirmed that children of affectively ill parents are at a greater risk for psychiatric disorders than children from homes with non-ill parents. Life table estimates indicate that by the age of 20 a child with an affectively ill parent has a 40% chance of experiencing an episode of major depression. Children from homes with affectively ill parents are more likely to exhibit general difficulties in functioning, increased guilt, and interpersonal difficulties as well as problems with attachment. Marital difficulties, parenting problems, and chronicity and severity of parental affective illness have been associated with the increased rates of disorder observed in these children. CONCLUSION: The presence of depression in parents should alert clinicians to the fact that their children also may be depressed and therefore in need of services

Children of alcoholics in Spain: From risk to pathology: Results from the ALFIL program

Díaz R, Gual A, García M, Arnau J, Pascual F, Cañuelo B, et al. (2008)

OBJECTIVE:
To identify the possible risk factors and negative outcomes associated with parental alcoholism. A secondary aim was to determine the influence of the family density of alcoholism on children of alcoholics' (COAs) psychological functioning.
METHOD:
A multisite epidemiological study was conducted in 8 Spanish cities, recruiting a total sample of 371 COAs (whose parents were in contact with alcohol treatment centers and accepted to participate in this study) and 147 controls (from schools in the same localities as COAs). Both groups were 6-17 years old and received a comprehensive evaluation of mental disorders (no symptoms, subclinical symptoms or clinical diagnosis for each disorder; according to DSM-IV criteria); alcohol and other substance use (none, occasional, regular and risky consumption); school achievement (low, middle and high) and other academic performance indicators (WISC-R Information and Arithmetic subtests, school support activities and failed subjects and courses). Lastly, several cognitive functions were measured by the WISC-R Similarities, Block Design and Digit Symbol subtests, the Toulouse-Piéron test and the Stroop test. Logistic regression methods were used to compare both groups and a linear regression model was used to determine the influence of the family density of alcoholism. The following confounding variables were controlled for: age, gender, socio-economic status and family cohesion.
RESULTS:
Children of alcoholics' were twice as likely as controls to present subclinical symptoms and four times more likely than controls to have a definite diagnosis of any mental disorder. More specifically, COAs had a significantly higher risk than controls of attention deficit disorder/hyperactivity, depression, phobias, enuresis and tics. COAs also tended to have more symptoms of generalized anxiety disorder. COAs had worse results on all the cognitive tests used and their risk of low school achievement was nine times higher than that of controls. Family density of alcoholism was significantly related to several psychiatric disorders and to low academic and cognitive performance in these children.
CONCLUSION:
Children of alcoholics' whose parents are in contact with treatment centers in Spain constitute a target group for selective prevention, as they have a higher risk of different negative outcomes, which mainly include attention disorders and other cognitive deficits, depression and anxiety.

Children of alcoholics in Spain: From risk to pathology: Results from the ALFIL program

Díaz R, Gual A, García M, Arnau J, Pascual F, Cañuelo B, et al. (2008)

OBJECTIVE:
To identify the possible risk factors and negative outcomes associated with parental alcoholism. A secondary aim was to determine the influence of the family density of alcoholism on children of alcoholics' (COAs) psychological functioning.
METHOD:
A multisite epidemiological study was conducted in 8 Spanish cities, recruiting a total sample of 371 COAs (whose parents were in contact with alcohol treatment centers and accepted to participate in this study) and 147 controls (from schools in the same localities as COAs). Both groups were 6-17 years old and received a comprehensive evaluation of mental disorders (no symptoms, subclinical symptoms or clinical diagnosis for each disorder; according to DSM-IV criteria); alcohol and other substance use (none, occasional, regular and risky consumption); school achievement (low, middle and high) and other academic performance indicators (WISC-R Information and Arithmetic subtests, school support activities and failed subjects and courses). Lastly, several cognitive functions were measured by the WISC-R Similarities, Block Design and Digit Symbol subtests, the Toulouse-Piéron test and the Stroop test. Logistic regression methods were used to compare both groups and a linear regression model was used to determine the influence of the family density of alcoholism. The following confounding variables were controlled for: age, gender, socio-economic status and family cohesion.
RESULTS:
Children of alcoholics' were twice as likely as controls to present subclinical symptoms and four times more likely than controls to have a definite diagnosis of any mental disorder. More specifically, COAs had a significantly higher risk than controls of attention deficit disorder/hyperactivity, depression, phobias, enuresis and tics. COAs also tended to have more symptoms of generalized anxiety disorder. COAs had worse results on all the cognitive tests used and their risk of low school achievement was nine times higher than that of controls. Family density of alcoholism was significantly related to several psychiatric disorders and to low academic and cognitive performance in these children.
CONCLUSION:
Children of alcoholics' whose parents are in contact with treatment centers in Spain constitute a target group for selective prevention, as they have a higher risk of different negative outcomes, which mainly include attention disorders and other cognitive deficits, depression and anxiety.

Children of Depressed Mothers 1 Year After the Initiation of Maternal Treatment: Findings From the STAR*D-Child Study

Pilowsky D, Wickramaratne P, Talati A, Tang M, Hughes C, Garber J, et al. (2008)

Objective: Maternal depression is a consistent and well-replicated risk factor for child psychopathology. The authors examined the changes in psychiatric symptoms and global functioning in children of depressed women 1 year following the initiation of treatment for maternal major depressive disorder. Method: Participants were 1) 151 women with maternal major depression who were enrolled in the Sequenced Treatment Alternatives to Relieve Depression (STAR*D) study and 2) their eligible offspring who, along with the mother, participated in the child STAR*D (STAR*D-Child) study (mother-child pairs: N=151). The STAR*D study was a multisite study designed to determine the comparative effectiveness and acceptability of various treatment options for adult outpatients with nonpsychotic major depressive disorder. The STAR*D-Child study examined children of depressed women at baseline and involved periodic follow-ups for 1 year after the initiation of treatment for maternal major depressive disorder to ascertain the following data: 1) whether changes in children's psychiatric symptoms were associated with changes in the severity of maternal depression and 2) whether outcomes differed among the offspring of women who did and did not remit (mother-child pairs with follow-up data: N=123). Children's psychiatric symptoms in the STAR*D-Child study were assessed using the Schedule for Affective Disorders and Schizophrenia for School-Age Children—Present and Lifetime Version (K-SADS-PL), and maternal depression severity in the STAR*D study was assessed by an independent clinician, using the 17-item Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (HAM-D). Results: During the year following the initiation of treatment, maternal depression severity and children's psychiatric symptoms continued to decrease over time. Decreases in the number of children's psychiatric symptoms were significantly associated with decreases in maternal depression severity. When children's outcomes were examined separately, a statistically significant decrease in symptoms was evident in the offspring of women who remitted early (i.e., within the first 3 months after the initiation of treatment for maternal depression) or late (i.e., over the 1-year follow-up interval) but not in the offspring of nonremitting women. Conclusions: Continued efforts to treat maternal depression until remission is achieved are associated with decreased psychiatric symptoms and improved functioning in the offspring.

Children of Mothers with Intellectual Disability: Stigma, Mother-Child Relationship and Self-esteem

Perkins, TS., Holburn, S., Deaux, K., Flory, MJ., & Vietze. PM. (2002)

Background  We investigated mother–child relationships and self-esteem of typical children of mothers with intellectual disability.

Methods  Eighteen girls and 18 boys from various ethnic groups were administered questionnaires to assess: (a) attachment style; (b) caregiver style; (c) perception of maternal stigma; and (d) self-esteem. The children were also asked to list the identities or roles that they play in life.

Results  Results suggested that: (a) the relationship between the child's perception of stigma and attachment to the mother is mediated by the warmth of the mother's caregiving style; and (b) if the child has an avoidant or anxious/ambivalent attachment to the mother, self-esteem tends to be lower. Furthermore, multiple identities contribute to positive self-esteem among these children.

Conclusions  Results are discussed in relation to the model presented and the consistency of the findings with attachment theory.

Children of Mothers with Serious Substance Abuse Problems: An Accumulation of Risks.

Conners NA, Bradley RH, Mansell LW, Liu JY, Roberts TJ, Burgdorf K, et al. (2003)

This study examines the life circumstances and experiences of 4084 children affected by maternal addiction to alcohol or other drugs. The paper will address the characteristics of their caregivers, the multiple risk factors faced by these children, their health and development, and their school performance. Data were collected from mothers at intake into 50 publicly funded residential substance abuse treatment programs for pregnant and parenting women. Findings from this study suggest that children whose mothers abuse alcohol or other drugs confront a high level of risk and are at increased vulnerability for physical, academic, and social-emotional problems. Children affected by maternal addiction are in need of long-term supportive services.

Children of parents with intellectual disability: Facing poor outcomes or faring okay?

Collings, S., & Llewellyn, G. (2012)

Background Children of parents with intellectual disability are assumed to be at risk of poor outcomes but a comprehensive review of the literature has not previously been undertaken.
Method A database and reference search from March 2010 to March 2011 resulted in 26 studies for review.
Results Two groups of studies were identified. The first investigated an association between parental intellectual disability and child outcomes where there was significant disadvantage. Some findings suggest low parental intellectual capacity can negatively impact child outcomes, but others indicate child development approaches population norms. A second, small group of studies explored narrative accounts of childhood to find that social exclusion, bullying, and stigma are commonplace. Removal from parental care emerged as a significant risk for this group of children.
Conclusions Studies focusing on child development represent 85% of the literature but reach no consensus about likely developmental or behavioural outcomes. Children studied usually come from clinical populations or other high-risk groups, and are typically young children.

Children with medical complexity: an emerging population for clinical and research initiatives

Cohen, E., Kuo, D. Z., Agrawal, R., Berry, J. B., Bhagat, S. K. M., Simon, T. D., & Srivastava, R. (2011)

Children with medical complexity (CMC) have medical fragility and intensive care needs that are not easily met by existing health care models. CMC may have a congenital or acquired multisystem disease, a severe neurologic condition with marked functional impairment, and/or technology dependence for activities of daily living. Although these children are at risk of poor health and family outcomes, there are few well-characterized clinical initiatives and research efforts devoted to improving their care. In this article, we present a definitional framework of CMC that consists of substantial family-identified service needs, characteristic chronic and severe conditions, functional limitations, and high health care use. We explore the diversity of existing care models and apply the principles of the chronic care model to address the clinical needs of CMC. Finally, we suggest a research agenda that uses a uniform definition to accurately describe the population and to evaluate outcomes from the perspectives of the child, the family, and the broader health care system.

Children´s perceptions of parental multiple sclerosis

Cross, T., & Rintell, D. (1999)

Semi-structured interviews were conducted with 7-to-14-year-old children of parents with multiple sclerosis (MS; N = 21) to examine children's perceptions of MS, and a content analysis was conducted. Children observed visible and 'invisible' symptoms and affective distress. Few children had information about the physiological process of MS. The most frequent categories of causal beliefs were fate or chance, contagion and congenital/hereditary factors. Many children mentioned their own or other people's behaviour as influences on the course of MS. No children believed that parents' MS would get worse. Children need developmentally appropriate information, reassurance about their effect on parents and their own risk of contracting MS, and discussion of the stress on the family. The study suggests the value of psycho-educational intervention for many families with MS.

Children’s adjustment to parental death

Tremblay, G.C. & Israel, A.C. (1998)

Keywords:
parental death;childhood grieving;bereavement intervention
This article reviews the evidence regarding the effects of parental death on children's acute and long-term psychological adjustment, as well as the clinical literature describing interventions for bereaved families. The risk of adjustment difficulties for bereaved children has shown no consistent relation to complications of grieving, but is instead largely accounted for by an increased probability of inadequate care following the loss of a parent. The literature describing interventions for bereaved families offers little formal evaluation, and reflects our incomplete understanding of children's grief responses, and thus of appropriate treatment goals. Further research should focus on more molecular analysis of grief processes, including grief-related interactions between children and parents, and should take into account developmental variation in children's needs and experiences. The use of multiple informants of child and parent behavior is strongly recommended, and the unique contributions of longitudinal research in understanding children's adjustment to loss are highlighted.

Children’s experiences of information, advice and support from healthcare professionals when their parent has a cancer disease - experiences from an oncological outpatient department

Marie Golsäter,Susanne Knutsson, Karin Enskär (2021)

Purpose: This study was carried out in order to evaluate children's experiences after taking part in the pilot clinical intervention "See Me" aimed at supporting children as relatives.
Method: A qualitative explorative design with interviews was chosen, with analyses using an inductive approach. Interviews were conducted with 19 children (9 aged 7–12 years and 10 aged 13–18 years). The younger children were asked to draw a picture of a person in hospital, using the Child Drawing: hospital (CD:H) instrument to measure the child's level of anxiety. The older children completed the Caring Professional Scale (CPS) as a measure of the caring approach in their encounter with the nurse.
Results: The interviews with the children show that: they felt expected and welcomed at the hospital; they needed knowledge about their parent's situation; they needed information and participation based on their individual situation; and they needed the nurse to offer them information and support. The results from the pictures showed that one child had above-average levels of anxiety. The older children reported that the nurses were Competent Practitioners, but to a lesser degree that they were Compassionate Healers. Conclusions: The results of this pilot study indicate that the structure of "See Me" could be used as a starting point to ensure that children as relatives receive information, advice, and support. Further the results indicate that both CD:H and CPS could be used to evaluated children's experiences of support when a parent has a long-term illness.

Children’s experiences of parental mental illness: a literature review

Gladstone, B. M., Boydell, K. M., Seeman, M. V., & Mckeever, Patricia, D. (2011)

Abstract
AIM:
This paper provides a review of published qualitative research on children's experiences of parental mental illness.
METHODS:
We undertook a comprehensive search of Medical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System Online, PsycINFO, Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature, Sociological Abstracts and Applied Social Sciences Index and Abstracts databases, as well as citation searches in Web of Science and manual searches of other relevant journals and reference lists of primary papers.
RESULTS:
Although 20 studies met the search criteria, only 10 focused exclusively on children's descriptions of their experience--the remainder elicited adults' perspectives on children's experiences of parental mental illnesses. Findings are organized under three themes: the impact of illness on children's daily life, how children cope with their experiences and how children understand mental illness.
CONCLUSIONS:
Despite references to pervasive knowledge gaps in the literature, significant information has been accumulated about children's experiences of parental mental illness. Considerable variability in research findings and tensions remain unresolved. For example, evidence is mixed as to children's knowledge and understanding of mental illnesses and how best to deploy resources to help them acquire optimal information. Furthermore, children's desire to be recognized as important to their parents' well-being conflicted with adults' perceptions that children should be protected from too much responsibility. Nevertheless, the cumulative evidence remains a key reason for advocating for psychoeducation and peer-support group interventions for children, which are endorsed by child and adult study participants alike.

Children’s voices – Differentiating a child perspective from a child’s perspective. Developmental Neurorehabilitation

Nilsson S, Björkman B, Almqvist A-L, Almqvist L, Björk-Willén P, Donohue D, et al. (2013)

Objective: The aim of this paper was to discuss differences between having a child perspective and taking the child's perspective based on the problem being investigated.
Methods: Conceptual paper based on narrative review.
Results: The child's perspective in research concerning children that need additional support are important. The difference between having a child perspective and taking the child's perspective in conjunction with the need to know children's opinions has been discussed in the literature. From an ideological perspective the difference between the two perspectives seems self-evident, but the perspectives might be better seen as different ends on a continuum solely from an adult's view of children to solely the perspective of children themselves. Depending on the research question, the design of the study may benefit from taking either perspective. In this article, we discuss the difference between the perspectives based on the problem being investigated, children's capacity to express opinions, environmental adaptations and the degree of interpretation needed to understand children's opinions.
Conclusion: The examples provided indicate that children's opinions can be regarded in most research, although to different degrees.

Children's adjustment to a parent's stroke: determinants of health status and psychological problems, and the role of support from the rehabilitation team

Visser-Meily A, Post M, Meijer AM, Maas C, Ketelaar M, Lindeman E. (2005)

OBJECTIVE: To investigate the support given to young children of patients with stroke by rehabilitation teams and to identify characteristics of the patients, spouses and children that relate to children's adjustment 2 months after the patient's discharge. SUBJECTS AND METHODS: Seventy-seven children (< or =18 years of age) of patients with stroke consecutively admitted to inpatient rehabilitation were included. Adjustment was measured with the Child Behaviour Check List, Child Depression Inventory and Functional Status II. Multilevel regression analyses were conducted to identify determinants of adjustment. RESULTS: Half of the children received some form of support from a rehabilitation team. Receiving more support was related to more severe disability of the parent with stroke, but not to the child's health or behavioural problems at the start of the stroke victim's inpatient stay. At the start of rehabilitation, 54% of the children had subclinical or clinical problems. Children's adjustment 2 months after their parent's discharge was related to the strain on spouses and not to the patients' characteristics or those of the support. CONCLUSION: The children's adjustment was related to the strain perceived by the healthy parent. There is a need for support that focuses on the experience of children of patients with stroke, regardless of stroke severity.

Children's influence on wellbeing and acculturative stress in refugee families

Bergnehr D (2019)

This paper examines intergenerational, interdependent and contextual aspects of wellbeing and acculturative stress in refugee families during resettlement. Particular focus is placed on how children influence their parents. METHOD:
The study is based on interviews with and diary notes from Middle Eastern parents and children residing in Sweden. RESULTS: Analyzes of the narratives show how the direct and indirect influence of the child affects the parents in both negative and positive ways. Acculturative stress follows from unexpected and undesired migration outcomes, such as parent-child conflicts and low school achievement. Such strains add to other hardships refugee families face, for instance, unemployment, welfare dependence, poor housing, and insufficient mastery of the majority language. However, acculturative stress can be alleviated by the children's educational success, and reciprocal practices of love and caring including helping out with chores and supporting each other in different ways. CONCLUSIONS: Children's agency has significant effects on parents' wellbeing, as wellbeing is accomplished in and through relationships with others

Children's influence on wellbeing and acculturative stress in refugee families

Bergnehr D (2019)

Abstract
PURPOSE:
This paper examines intergenerational, interdependent and contextual aspects of wellbeing and acculturative stress in refugee families during resettlement. Particular focus is placed on how children influence their parents. METHOD:
The study is based on interviews with and diary notes from Middle Eastern parents and children residing in Sweden. RESULTS: Analyzes of the narratives show how the direct and indirect influence of the child affects the parents in both negative and positive ways. Acculturative stress follows from unexpected and undesired migration outcomes, such as parent-child conflicts and low school achievement. Such strains add to other hardships refugee families face, for instance, unemployment, welfare dependence, poor housing, and insufficient mastery of the majority language. However, acculturative stress can be alleviated by the children's educational success, and reciprocal practices of love and caring including helping out with chores and supporting each other in different ways. CONCLUSIONS: Children's agency has significant effects on parents' wellbeing, as wellbeing is accomplished in and through relationships with others

Children's loneliness: A comparison of rejected and neglected peer status.

Asher SR, Wheeler VA. (1985)

Recent research indicates that a considerable number of children report extreme feelings of loneliness and that unpopular children are more lonely than popular children. In the present study, we assessed feelings of loneliness of two subgroups of unpopular children, those who were sociometrically rejected versus those who were sociometrically neglected. Data on popular, average, and controversial children were also collected. Results from 200 third- through sixth-grade children indicated that rejected children were the most lonely group and that this group differed significantly from other status groups. Neglected children did not differ from higher status peers. Overall, the results provide added evidence of the utility of the distinction between neglected versus rejected status and provide support for earlier conclusions that rejected children are more at risk than are other status groups.

Children's perceptions and experiences of care giving: A focus group study

Earley, L., Cushway, D. & Cassidy, T. (2007)

The stress of care giving for spouses and adult children has been extensively documented in the empirical literature. More recently attention has been paid to children's involvement in family care giving. Qualitative studies in the social welfare field have highlighted the social restrictions caring places upon children. There remains a need, however, to understand what children are thinking and feeling in an effort to cope with their care-giving demands. This study used a focus group methodology and individual interviews to explore the experiences of 17 young carers aged between 10 and 16. Thematic analysis was employed to identify themes relating to the nature of stressors, their appraisal of them, and the coping strategies they use to manage the task of caring.

Children's perceptions and experiences of care giving: A focus group study (PDF Download Available). Available from: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/232937648_Children's_perceptions_and_experiences_of_care_giving_A_focus_group_study [accessed Nov 15 2017].

Choice and preference assessment research with people with severe to profound developmental disabilities: A review of the literature

Caltenco, H., Larsen, H. S., & Hedvall, P. O. (2005)

Since the last major empirical review on choice interventions and preference assessments among people with severe to profound developmental disabilities (Lancioni, O'Reilly, & Emerson, 1996) the body of research in this area has grown extensively. This paper reviews thirty studies carried out between 1996 and 2002 that have been sorted into four categories. These categories are (a) building choice opportunities into daily contexts; (b) assessing the effects of choice making on various parameters of behavior; (c) assessing preferences; and (d) assessing the effectiveness of various preference assessment formats. The main findings in these studies were that choice interventions led to decreases in inappropriate behavior and increases in appropriate behavior, and that various preference assessments could be used to identify reinforcing stimuli. The findings are discussed in relation to technical and practical rehabilitation questions. Potential issues for future research are also examined.

Chronic childhood disease: An introduction to psychological theory and research.

Eiser, Christine (1990)

The author draws extensively on the published research findings in child health psychology, and also on her own experience of working with pediatric medical and nursing staff. The emphasis throughout her book is on coping, and helping families to cope, with the stresses imposed by chronic childhood illness. Frequent hospital admissions, pain and its evaluation and control, adjustment and sources of support, communication, education and programs for intervention, all of these topics are discussed sensitively and with authority.

Clinical implications of The development of the person

Suess, G. J., & Sroufe, J. (2005)

The Minnesota longitudinal study of parents and children from birth to adulthood provides both a theoretical framework and a host of empirical findings that can serve to bridge the gap between research and clinical application. Key among these findings are: (a) the ongoing impact of early relationship experiences throughout the years, even with later experience and circumstances controlled; (b) the cumulative nature of experience and its continual impact with current context; (c) the important role of adult partner relationships; (d) the increasingly active role of the persons themselves in their own development; and (e) the interplay between experience, representation, and ongoing adaptation. These findings, and the theoretical structure underlying them, suggest the need for complex, comprehensive intervention that begins early, with a focus on altering the quality of parent - child relationships. At the same time, additional components, including couples therapy and efforts to alter the child's inner constructions of experience, are clearly suggested. One must attend to forces maintaining children on maladaptive developmental pathways once established, as well as understanding the factors that initiated such pathways.

Clinically significant trauma symptoms and behavioral problems in a community-based sample of children exposed to domestic violence

Spilsbury, J. C., Belliston, L., Drotar, D., Drinkard, A., Kretschmar, J., Creeden, R., . . . Friedman, S. (2007)

This study assessed the associations of characteristics of domestic violence incidents with clinically significant levels of traumatic symptoms and behavioral problems in a socio-economically and ethnically mixed sample of 687 children participating in a community-service program for children witnessing violence. Study predictors included child/family demographic characteristics, type and chronicity of exposure, and child's perceptions of control over the event and threat to personal safety. Outcomes consisted of traumatic symptoms and behavior problems. Results showed that perceived threat and control were associated with greater odds of clinically significant levels of several trauma symptoms (and behavior problems in the case of perceived threat) after adjusting for effects of demographic factors and violence characteristics. Child co-victimization increased odds of reaching clinically significant levels of traumatic symptoms compared to children who witnessed the event but were not victimized. Female sex and White ethnicity increased odds of specific trauma symptoms and behavior problems. Increasing age reduced odds of some trauma symptoms. Associations between predictors and one outcome measure did not generalize across the other outcome measure. Implications of study findings, and directions for future research are discussed.

Senast uppdaterad 2021-01-25 av Peter Eriksson, ansvarig utgivare Lennart Magnusson