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'Mastering an unpredictable everyday life after stroke'--older women's experiences of caring and living with their partners.

Gosman-Hedstrom G, Dahlin-Ivanoff S. (2012)


INTRODUCTION:
The shift from older persons living in institutions to living in the community naturally affects both the older persons and their partners. The informal care is often taken for granted, and the research that focuses on the diversity of older female carers needs is scarce.
AIM:
To explore and learn from the older women how they experience their life situation and formal support as carers of their partners after stroke and to suggest clinical implications.
METHOD:
The design of the study is qualitative being based on the focus group method. Sixteen carers, median age 74 years (range 67-83), participated in four focus group discussions, which each met once for not more than 2 hours.
FINDINGS:
The discussions resulted in one comprehensive theme; 'Mastering an uncertain and unpredictable everyday life'. Three subthemes emerged from the material: 'Living with another man' where the carers discussed not only the marked change in their partner's personality, but also the loss of a life-companion and their mutual intellectual contact; 'Fear of it happening again', comprising the carers' experiences of fear and confinement, of always having to be ready to help and of being trapped at home; 'Ongoing negotiation', referring to the carers' struggling and negotiating not only with their partners, but also with themselves and formal care for time to themselves.
CONCLUSION:
This study helps us to understand how these older women tried to master an uncertain and unpredictable life. Their life had changed radically; now they were always on call to help their partners and felt tied to home. The results draw attention to the carers' need for time to themselves, a greater knowledge of stroke and continuous support from formal care.
2012 The Authors. Scandinavian Journal of Caring Sciences © 2012 Nordic College of Caring Science.

Med rätt att bestämma själv? – ”exit”, ”voice” och personlig assistans

Hugemark, Agneta (2004)

This study focuses on the influence a user may have over his or her welfare service, personal assistance.
A county, an assistance firm and a user cooperative are compared with the thesis that the organisation
that surrounds the users shapes the possibilities the user have to influence his or her personal
assistance. There are questions that try to answer if there are outspoken social goals within each
organisation. Questions regarding influence of the user when she och he is choosing the assistans
provider and the users possibility to influence and his or her power to decide who and when anyone
works as an assistant are asked.

Mediation of the effects of the Family Bereavement Program on mental health problems of bereaved children and adolescents

Tein, J., Sandler, I.N., Ayers, T.S., & Wolchik, S.A. (2006)

This study presents an analysis of mediation of the effects of the Family Bereavement Program (FBP) to improve mental health outcomes of girls at 11 months following program participation. The FBP was designed based on a theory that program-induced change in multiple child and family level mediators would lead to reductions in children's mental health problems. Mediational models were tested using a three wave and a two wave longitudinal design. Using a three wave longitudinal design, FBP effects on three variables at T2 (increased positive parenting, decreased negative events, and decreased inhibition of emotional expression) were found to mediate the effects of the FBP on mental health problems at 11-month follow-up. Using a two-wave longitudinal design, support was found for FBP effects on three additional variables at 11-month follow-up (increased positive coping, decreased negative thoughts about stressors, and decreased unknown control beliefs) to mediate program effects to reduce mental health problems at 11-month follow-up. The discussion focuses on theoretical explanations for the mediational effects and on implications for identifying "core components" of the FBP that are responsible for its effects to reduce mental health problems of girls.

Min syster fick Alzheimer – om vård och bemötande ur ett anhörigperspektiv

Andersson, Irene (2011)

Moniqa Andersson är bara 58 år då hon får diagnosen Alzheimers sjukdom. I boken Min syster fick Alzheimer - om vård och bemötande ur ett anhörigperspektiv beskriver hennes syster, bokens författare, hur hon går bredvid genom sjukdomsförloppet och kämpar för att Moniqa ska få en trygg och fungerande vård på ett demensboende. Min syster fick Alzheimer är inte bara en engagerad och personlig skildring av hur en demenssjukdom utvecklas och hur de närstående drabbas, den ger också en värdefull inblick i hur vårdsystemet fungerar. Iréne Andersson reflekterar träffsäkert över bemötandet inom den kommunala demensvården och psykiatrin samt ger ett antal konkreta råd om vad som skulle kunna förbättras. Hon problematiserar vidare begreppen "anhörig" och "anhörigsjukdom" samt tar upp frågor om identitet, etik och ansvar. Här kommer många anhöriga och närstående att känna igen sig och få stöd. Författarens iakttagelser gör också boken särskilt intressant för personal i kommun och landsting. Iréne Andersson arbetar som lektor vid Malmö högskola med utbildningsvetenskap samt forskar om genus och fredshistoria. Hon är även flitigt anlitad av Alzheimerföreningen som föreläsare.

Motivation for Money and Care that Adult Children Provide for Parents: Evidence from “Point-Blank” Survey Questions. Working Paper 2004-17

Cox, D. and B. Soldo (2004)

When adult children provide care for their aging parents, they often do so at great expense to themselves incurring psychic, monetary, emotional, and even physical costs, in conjunction with care that is labor intensive and, at the extreme, unrelenting. While the nature of parent care and the profile of care giving children are well described in the literatures of the social sciences, we still lack insight into why adult children undertake parent care without compensation or compulsion. In this paper, we adopt a novel, direct question approach using newly available data from a special module fielded in the 2000 Health and Retirement Study that included questions on motivations for, and concerns with, the provision of familial assistance. Transfers are not always provided free of pressure from other family members, for example, and familial norms of obligations and traditions appear to matter for many respondents. These findings suggest that the standard set of economic considerations—utility interdependence, budget constraints, exchange, and the like—are insufficient for a complete understanding of private transfer behavior. Though one must always be skeptical about reading too much into what people say about why they do the things they do (or think they will do) we nonetheless conclude that "point-blank" questions offer, at the very least, a worthwhile complement to the more conventional methods for unraveling motivations for private, intergenerational transfers.

Mönster i anhörigomsorgen: En uppföljning i Mullsjö 2010

Malmberg, B. and G. Sundström (2012)

Institutet för gerontologi (IFG) genomförde 2008 en enkätundersökning bland alla Mullsjöbor som var 55 år och äldre, varav närmare 70 procent svarade eller drygt 1 600 personer. En dryg femtedel gav omsorg i någon form till närstående personer och omsorgsmönstren svarade väl med resultat i andra undersökningar. En mindre del gav "tung" omsorg, oftast till en partner. Fler gav mindre omfattande omsorg till föräldrar eller andra närstående, men det var också vanligt med "lätt" hjälp till grannar m.fl. (Socialstyrelsen 2009).

År 2010 genomfördes en uppföljningsundersökning av IFG med 911 av dessa personer: Nu var 14 procent omsorgsgivare, varav två tredjedelar var samma personer som 2008. Rörligheten var således betydande: Många hade slutat att ge omsorg – eller såg inte längre det de gjorde som omsorg - och ganska många hade börjat göra det. Även 2010 gjorde de flesta relativt "små" insatser, och ganska få av de "lätta" åtagandena 2008 hade blivit "tunga" 2010. Givare av anhörigomsorg delar fortfarande ofta omsorgsansvaret med någon annan anhörig.

I växande utsträckning delas ansvaret också med den kommunala omsorgen: 2010 hade 77 procent av mottagarna av anhörigomsorgen även någon form av kommunal omsorg (40 procent hade hemtjänst), som de anhöriga ganska ofta är nöjda med. Allt fler nås av hemtjänst, färdtjänst, trygghetslarm och/eller annan offentlig omsorg.

 

Negotiating family responsibilities

Finch, J. and J. Mason (1993)

Negotiating Family Responsibilitiesprovides a major new insight into contemporary family life, particularly kin relationships outside the nuclear family. While many people believe that the real meaning of 'family' has shrunk to the nuclear family household, there is considerable evidence to suggest that relationships with the wider kin group remain an important part of most people's lives.
Based on the findings of a major study of kinship, and including lively verbatim accounts of conversations with family members concepts of responsibility and obligation within family life are examined and the authors expand theories on the nature of assistance within families and argue that it is negotiated over time rather than given automatically.

Optimizing treatment effects for substance-abusing women with children: an evaluation of the Susan B. Anthony Center.

Sowers KM, Ellis RA, Washington TA, Currant M. (2002)

Substance abuse among women is a significant national problem. Historically, the treatment of this condition has been difficult, but it has been even more challenging when the woman in treatment has had children. This article reports the results of an evaluation of the Susan B. Anthony Center (SBAC), a residential treatment facility for recovering women and their children. Researchers studied outcomes for 41 women who were first treated in a detoxification program, then referred to either SBAC or a day treatment program. Although random assignment to groups was not possible, the groups were comparable on four major demographic variables. The SBAC groups reported better outcomes on three psychosocial variables: abstinence, arrest, and employment. They improved their total score on the Functional Assessment Rating Scale substantially more than did the comparison group. Consumer satisfaction was also high.

Optimizing treatment effects for substance-abusing women with children: an evaluation of the Susan B. Anthony Center.

Sowers KM, Ellis RA, Washington TA, Currant M. (2002)

Substance abuse among women is a significant national problem. Historically, the treatment of this condition has been difficult, but it has been even more challenging when the woman in treatment has had children. This article reports the results of an evaluation of the Susan B. Anthony Center (SBAC), a residential treatment facility for recovering women and their children. Researchers studied outcomes for 41 women who were first treated in a detoxification program, then referred to either SBAC or a day treatment program. Although random assignment to groups was not possible, the groups were comparable on four major demographic variables. The SBAC groups reported better outcomes on three psychosocial variables: abstinence, arrest, and employment. They improved their total score on the Functional Assessment Rating Scale substantially more than did the comparison group. Consumer satisfaction was also high.

Parent management of attendance and adherence in child and adolescent therapy: A conceptual and empirical review

Nock, M. K., & Ferriter, C. (2005)

There have been impressive, recent advances in the development of efficacious treatments for child and adolescent behavior problems. However, specific methods for delivering these treatments in a way that amplifies their efficacy have not been well articulated. Although many factors may be involved, attendance and adherence to treatment are arguably the most basic necessities for effective treatment delivery. We provide a conceptual and empirical review of past research on attendance and adherence to child and adolescent therapy, with a special focus on the importance of parents/guardians in managing treatment participation. Our review demonstrates that attendance and adherence are associated with a range of significant methodological, clinical, and financial outcomes. Several pretreatment predictors of attendance and adherence have been identified; however, to date only 12 controlled, clinical trials have evaluated strategies for enhancing attendance and adherence to child therapy. We conclude with an agenda for advancing research on the prediction and enhancement of attendance and adherence to child therapy as a means of improving the efficiency and effectiveness of child treatments.

Parentally bereaved children and posttraumatic growth: insights from an etnographic study of a UK childhood bereavement service

Brewer, J. & Sparkes, A. (2011)

Drawing on data generated from a two-year ethnographic study of the Rocky Centre (achildhood bereavement organisation in the UK), this article explores the positive changes and themes of posttraumatic growth experienced by parentally bereaved young people. Although the broader study generated data from participant observation, interviews and a documentary analysis, this article focuses specifically on the interviews with 13 young people to identify the themes of posttraumatic growth that emerged from the participants' narratives. Of these, four had been recently bereaved and nine had experienced the death of a parent over 10 years ago. Interviews were transcribed verbatim and analysed for themes that reflected the young people's experiences of growing through grief. Those identified were as follows: positive outlook, gratitude, appreciation of life, living life to the full, and altruism. Each theme isdiscussed in turn, and the implications of the findings for research and practice are addressed.

Paternal postpartum depression, its relationship to maternal postpartum depression, and implications for family health

Goodman, J. (2004)

BACKGROUND:
Much attention has been paid to the problem of postpartum depression in women. However, there is some indication that men also experience depression after the birth of a child, and that paternal depression is linked to maternal depression.
AIMS:
The purpose of this integrative review was to examine current knowledge about postpartum depression in fathers. Specific aims were (1) to examine the incidence of paternal depression in the first year after the birth of a child, (2) to identify the characteristics and predictors of paternal postpartum depression, (3) to describe the relationship between maternal and paternal postpartum depression, and (4) to discuss the influence of paternal depression on the family and infant.
METHODS:
A literature search from 1980 to 2002 was carried out using the CINAHL, PsychInfo, and Medline electronic databases. Twenty research studies were identified that included incidence rates of paternal depression during the first year postpartum. These were further examined and synthesized regarding onset, severity, duration, and predictors of paternal depressive symptoms, and for information about the relationship between maternal and paternal depression.
FINDINGS:
During the first postpartum year, the incidence of paternal depression ranged from 1.2% to 25.5% in community samples, and from 24% to 50% among men whose partners were experiencing postpartum depression. Maternal depression was identified as the strongest predictor of paternal depression during the postpartum period. The implications of parental depression for family health were discussed.
CONCLUSIONS:
Postpartum depression in men is a significant problem. The strong correlation of paternal postpartum depression with maternal postpartum depression has important implications for family health and well-being. Consideration of postpartum depression in fathers as well as mothers, and consideration of co-occurrence of depression in couples, is an important next step in research and practice involving childbearing families.

Perceived burden, lived experiences and experiences of learning processes and illness management in parents of children with severe or moderate haemophilia

Myrin Westesson, Linda (2019)

Doktorsavhandling

Haemophilia is a complex condition to manage, especially for parents of newly diagnosed children, and the illness affects the whole family. The parents are deeply involved in the child's treatment, as they frequently have to administer intravenous injections at home. The overall aim was to investigate perceived burden, lived experiences and to explore experiences of learning processes and illness management in parents of children with severe or moderate haemophilia. In studies I-III, a qualitative approach was motivated to describe experiences of parenting a child with haemophilia. Study III employed a longitudinal design to explore the learning process, while study IV employed a quantitative method with a cross-sectional survey. The results reveal that the mothers often needed to become reconciled both with the fact of the child's illness and their own carriership. However, having a child with severe or moderate haemophilia was life changing for both fathers and mothers. The parents were forced into a situation where they had to learn about and manage their child's illness in daily life. Thus, a desire to become independent of health care professionals in this respect emerged as a key incentive for learning. How this learning process developed and how long it took depended on different factors. For example, parents of children with past or present inhibitors reported higher perceived burden than parents of children without a history of inhibitors. Nevertheless, independently managing home treatment was essential for the parents to feel in control of their life-world again. One conclusion is that female carriers need more knowledge about their carriership and would benefit from counselling before starting a family. One suggestion is that acceptance of the child's illness and reconciliation with the new complex family situation could be promoted with person-centred care. Furthermore, the findings underline that health care professionals need to be aware of an increased burden on parents of young children and particularly the burden on parents of young children with inhibitors.

Personlighetsstörningar. Kliniska riktlinjer för utredning och behandling. Svensk Psykiatri nr 9.

Svenska Psykiatriska Föreningen (2006)

Kliniska riktlinjer för personlighetsstörningar som nu presenteras är
nummer 9 i en serie av riktlinjer som framtagits i Svenska Psykiatriska
Föreningens regi sedan 1996. Tidigare har riktlinjer publicerats
med titlarna Schizofreni och schizofreniliknande tillstånd, Förstämningssjukdomar,
Ångestsyndrom, Alkoholproblem, Självmordsnära
patienter, Tvångsvård, Äldrepsykiatri och Ätstörningar. Dessa riktlinjer
kan beställas från Förlagshuset Gothia (www.gothia.verbum.se,
sök "psykiatri").
Människor med personlighetsstörningar har länge betraktats som
en svår patientgrupp då interaktionen med omgivningen ofta blir problematisk
och konfliktfylld. Personlighetsstörningar är vanligt förekommande
i den vuxna befolkningen. Prevalensen i vården är hög –
inte minst bland psykiatriska patienter – och samsjuklighet med andra
psykiatriska tillstånd är vanlig. Det finns ett stort behov av kunskap
om personlighetsstörningar, vilket gör att de kliniska riktlinjer
som nu presenteras är mycket angelägna och välkomna. Arbetsgruppen
med Lisa Ekselius i spetsen har på ett mycket förtjänstfullt sätt
åskådliggjort personlighetsstörningarnas kliniska uttryck, komplexitet
och drabbade personers subjektiva lidande. Ett av huvudsyftena
med de nu presenterade riktlinjerna är att göra personlighetsstörningarna
igenkännbara för oss alla som möter patienter med dessa tillstånd
i vår kliniska vardag. Genom att tidigt kunna identifiera personlighetsstörningar
hos patienter, kan man formulera realistiska behandlingsmål
och minska risken för att de hamnar i ofruktsamma
behandlingskontakter. Detta gäller inte minst många patienter som
behandlas för ett axel-I-syndrom. Idag finns en rad diagnostiska
5
hjälpmedel som kan underlätta identifiering av personlighetsstörningar.
Trots att det fortfarande råder brist på empirisk forskning inom
området finns det belägg för att dessa störningar går att behandla
framgångsrikt. Tydlig struktur samt värnande om den terapeutiska alliansen
mellan patient och behandlare är väsentliga för all form av behandling
av patienter med personlighetsstörningar.
Personlighetsstörningsproblematiken leder många gånger till funktionella
svårigheter i livet, känsla av utanförskap och subjektivt lidande.
Inte minst gäller det patienter med borderline personlighetsstörning,
där även risken för självskadebeteende och suicid är hög. Det är
hoppfullt att behandlingsmetoder som dialektisk beteendeterapi
(DBT) har visat sig vara effektiv för dessa patienter. Andra personlighetsstörningar,
främst antisocial personlighetsstörning, åsamkar
framför allt omgivningen lidande och problem. Ofta förvärras detta
av koppling till missbruk och leder inte sällan till våld och kriminalitet.
I dagens samhällsklimat är riskbedömning av upprepat våld en viktig
men grannlaga uppgift. Inom rättspsykiatrin, där många av dessa
patienter finns, används idag bedömningsinstrument som har visat sig
kunna bidra till säkrare bedömning av återfallsrisk. För patienter
utanför den rättspsykiatriska vården är riskbedömningsinstrumentet
osäkrare och det finns för närvarande inget som kan ersätta en samlad
klinisk bedömning. Det är dock viktigt att riskbedömningar görs
på ett så strukturerat sätt som möjligt av patienter med personlighetsstörning,
särskilt vid samtidig förekomst av missbruk.

Places social relations and activities in the everyday lives of folder adults with psychiatric disabilities: an interview study

Nordström, M., Dunér, E., Olin, A., & Wijk, H. (2009)

BACKGROUND:
Knowledge about the daily life of older adults with psychiatric disabilities is extremely limited, especially from the standpoint of the individual. The overall aim of this study was to describe and analyze the ways in which older adults with a psychiatric disability experience places, social relations and activities in different arenas of their everyday lives.
METHOD:
Twelve older adults (>55 years) with a psychiatric disability were interviewed either once or twice, using different interview techniques. The first interviews were semi-structured and the second were in-depth interviews guided by a site-map. The interview texts were analyzed using qualitative content analysis, proceeding from open to focused coding in several steps.
RESULTS:
Although the respondents spent most of their time in their own homes, some also spent a lot of time at day-care centers and other similar places. The amount of time spent in places in the public arena varied a great deal. The interviewees' experiences of the places, relationships and activities in their everyday lives can be related to aspects of freedom and coercion, internal and external structure, and relationships and support.
CONCLUSION:
The provision of a varied range of services and support in diverse settings in order to make these accessible to persons of different ages and needs is an important challenge for welfare politics.

Positive parenting as a protective resource for parentally bereaved children

Haine, R.A., Wolchik, S.A., Sandler, I.N., Millsap, R.E. & Ayers, T.S. (2006)

Positive parenting was examined as a protective resource against the adverse effects of negative life events on parentally bereaved children's mental health problems. The sample consisted of 313 recently bereaved children ages 8 to 16 and their current caregiver. Both the compensatory (direct effect independent of negative life events) and the stress-buffer (interactive effect with negative life events) protective resource models were examined and child gender was explored as a moderator of both models. Results revealed evidence for the compensatory protective resource model for both child and caregiver reports of mental health problems. No evidence of the stress-buffer model or child gender as a moderator was found. Implications for the understanding of children's responses to the death of a parent and the development and implementation of preventive interventions are discussed.

Prevalence and correlates of adult attentiondeficit hyperactivity disorder: meta-analysis

Simon, V., Czobor, P., Balint, S., Meszaros, A., & Bitter, I. (2009)

BACKGROUND:
In spite of the growing literature about adult attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), relatively little is known about the prevalence and correlates of this disorder.

AIMS:
To estimate the prevalence of adult ADHD and to identify its demographic correlates using meta-regression analysis.

METHOD:
We used the MEDLINE, PsycLit and EMBASE databases as well as hand-searching to find relevant publications.

RESULTS:
The pooled prevalence of adult ADHD was 2.5% (95% CI 2.1-3.1). Gender and mean age, interacting with each other, were significantly related to prevalence of ADHD. Meta-regression analysis indicated that the proportion of participants with ADHD decreased with age when men and women were equally represented in the sample.

CONCLUSIONS:
Prevalence of ADHD in adults declines with age in the general population. We think, however, that the unclear validity of DSM-IV diagnostic criteria for this condition can lead to reduced prevalence rates by underestimation of the prevalence of adult ADHD.

Prevention and Intervention Strategies With Children of Alcoholics.

Emshoff JG, Price AW. (1999)

Objective. This article was designed to give pediatricians a basic knowledge of the needs of children who live in families with alcoholism. It briefly presents issues involved in the identification and screening of such individuals and provides primary attention to a variety of preventive and treatment strategies that have been used with school children of alcoholics (COAs), along with evidence of their effectiveness.

Methodology. A literature search including both published and unpublished descriptions and evaluations of interventions with COAs.

Results. The scope and nature of the problems of growing up in an alcoholic home are presented. The risk and protective factors associated with this population have been used as a foundation for preventive and treatment interventions. The most common modality of prevention and intervention programs is the short-term small group format. Programs for COAs should include the basic components of information, problem- and emotion-focused coping skills, and social and emotional support. Physicians are in a unique position to identify and provide basic services and referrals for COAs. School settings are the most common intervention sites, but family and broad-based community programs also have shown promise in alcohol and other drug prevention.

Conclusions. Several COA interventions have demonstrated positive results with respect to a variety of measures including knowledge of program content, social support, coping skills, and emotional functioning. Rigorous studies are needed to understand better the complex ways children deal with parental alcoholism. A need remains for empirically sound evaluations and for the delineation of research findings.

Preventive interventions in families with parental depression: Children’s psychosocial symptoms and prosocial behaviour

Solantaus, T., Paavonen, E.J., Toikka, S., & Punamäki, R.L. (2010)

The aim is to document the effectiveness of a preventive family intervention (Family Talk Intervention, FTI) and a brief psychoeducational discussion with parents (Let's Talk about the Children, LT) on children's psychosocial symptoms and prosocial behaviour in families with parental mood disorder, when the interventions are practiced in psychiatric services for adults in the finnish national health service. Patients with mood disorder were invited to participate with their families. Consenting families were randomized to the two intervention groups. The initial sample comprised 119 families and their children aged 8-16. Of these, 109 completed the interventions and the baseline evaluation. Mothers and fathers filled out questionnaires including standardized rating scales for children's symptoms and prosocial behaviour at baseline and at 4, 10 and 18 months post-intervention. The final sample consisted of parental reports on 149 children with 83 complete data sets. Both interventions were effective in decreasing children's emotional symptoms, anxiety, and marginally hyperactivity and in improving children's prosocial behaviour. The FTI was more effective than the LT on emotional symptoms particularly immediately after the intervention, while the effect of the LT emerged after a longer interval. The study supports the effectiveness of both interventions in families with depressed parents. The FTI is applicable in cultural settings other than the USA. Our findings provide support for including preventive child mental health measures as part of psychiatric services for mentally ill parents.

Projektrapport: Anhörig stöd vid Ersta sjukhus, Psykiatriska kliniken. Ht 2005 – Ht 2007

Ewertzon, M. (2007)

Ersta diakoni, Ersta sjukhus, Psykiatriska kliniken fick i Juli 2005 i uppdrag från Beställarkontoret vård vid Stockholms läns landsting (SLL) att under perioden hösten 2005 till 2007 utveckla stödinsatser riktat till anhöriga till personer med långvarig psykisk sjukdom. Uppdraget var länsövergripande och stödinsatserna skulle utformas som ett komplement till det stöd som patientens vårdgivare erbjöd. Projektet har fortlöpande genomförts i nära samverkan med intresseföreningar och psykiatriska verksamheter i Stockholms län, i syfte att optimalt tillgodose behovet av kompletterande stödinsatser bland anhöriga/närstående i länet. Stödinsatser och aktiviteter som anordnades var telefonrådgivning, psykopedagogiska grupper och öppna föreläsningar. I de 16 psykopedagogiska grupper som träffades vid fyra till sex tillfäller/grupp har totalt 204 grupper deltagit. I de sex öppna föreläsningarna med teman rörande anhöriga/närstående till person med psykisk sjukdom hat totalt ca 550 personer deltagit. De psykopedagogiska grupperna utvärderades via en enkät i samband med att de avslutades. Ett år efter avslutad grupp har fyra uppföljande fokusgruppsintervjuer genomförts bland syskon till person med psykossjukdom. I enkätutvärderingen framkom att att deltagarna värderade innehållet i föreläsningarna generellt högt. En klar majoritet uppgav att de hade fått mer kunskap om sjukdomen och behandlingen. En klar majoritet (87%) uppgav att erfarenhetsutbytet vid gruppträffarna varit till hjälp. Totalt svarande 94% att gruppträffarna varit till hjälp för dem. Mer än halva gruppen (60%) upplevde sig mindre stressade, eller att de var mindre irriterade eller oroliga vid svårigheter som har med sjukdomen att göra efter det att de deltagit i gruppträffarna. Nästan samtliga (97%) uppgav att de skulle vilja rekommendera denna form av träffar till andra personer. En majoritet (79%) önskade någon form av fortsättning eller uppföljning av träffarna, många förslag lämnades på hur dessa kan utformas. I fokusgrupperna deltog 13 personer. Eftersom det var för få personer som deltog planeras eventuellt ytterligare uppföljningar. Resultatet är ännu inte analyserat då eventuellt ytterligare intervjuer kommer att genomföras. I en första omgång framkom att majoriteten av deltagarna beskrev att träffarna haft betydelse; kunskapsmässigt och/eller känslomässigt. Även här framkom önskemål om någon form av fortsättning/uppföljning av träffarna. Deltagare som deltog i psykopedagogiska grupper under 2006 besvarade frågan "på vilka sätt de ansåg att den psykiatriska vården på bäst sätt kan hjälpa/stödja dem som anhörig/närstående till person med psykisk sjukdom". I svaren framkom förslag om hjälp/stöd på fyra nivåer; generellt stöd på samhällsnivå, eget stöd från vården, möjlighet att delta i vård och behandling samt god vård och behandling av den sjuke. Projektgruppens, som medverkade i och ansvarade för stödinsatserna, erfarenheter är att denna stödform är viktig som ett komplement till det stöd som bedrivs vid andra verksamheter i länet.

Psychological characteristics of children of alcoholics

Sher, KJ. (1997)

More than 20 years ago, researchers first noted that children of alcoholics (COA's) appeared to be affected by a variety of problems over the course of their life span. Such problems include fetal alcohol syndrome, which is first manifested in infancy; emotional problems and hyperactivity in childhood; emotional problems and conduct problems in adolescence; and the development of alcoholism in adulthood. Although much has been learned over the ensuing two decades, a number of controversial research areas remain. In particular, debate stems from the fact that despite a common interest in COA's, clinically focused literature and research-focused literature have resulted in two distinct bodies of knowledge. This article reviews important research results, with emphasis on findings generated by the alcohol-research community. Attention also is given to examining the empirical validity of concepts that have been advanced by several influential clinicians from the COA field.

A systematic review of internet-based self-management interventions for youth with health conditions

Stinson, J., Wilson, R., Gill, N., Yamada, J., & Holt, J. (2009)

Abstract
OBJECTIVE:
Critically appraise research evidence on effectiveness of internet self-management interventions on health outcomes in youth with health conditions.
METHODS:
Published studies of internet interventions in youth with health conditions were evaluated. Electronic searches were conducted in EBM Reviews-Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, Medline, EMBASE, CINAHL and PsychINFO. Two reviewers independently selected articles for review and assessed methodological quality. Of 29 published articles on internet interventions; only nine met the inclusion criteria and were included in analysis.
RESULTS:
While outcomes varied greatly between studies, symptoms improved in internet interventions compared to control conditions in seven of nine studies. There was conflicting evidence regarding disease-specific knowledge and quality of life, and evidence was limited regarding decreases in health care utilization.
CONCLUSIONS:
There are the beginnings of an evidence base that self-management interventions delivered via the internet improve selected outcomes in certain childhood illnesses.

A systematic review of parenting in relation to the development of comorbidities and functional impairments in children with Attention-Deficit/ Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD).

Deault, L. C. (2010)

This review synthesizes recent research evidence regarding the parenting characteristics associated with families with children with Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD). ADHD is a complex, heterogeneous disorder with a range of genetic and environmental factors that contribute to its behavioral expression and different developmental trajectories. The current review adopts a developmental psychopathology perspective to conceptualize the risk and protective factors that might shape the developmental pathways of the disorder across different domains. Following from Johnston and Mash's review (Johnston and Mash, Clin Child Fam Psychol Rev 4:183-207, 2001), the present review systematically examines empirical studies from 2000-2008 that investigate parenting variables in relation to the development of children with ADHD, with a particular focus on the development of externalizing and internalizing comorbidities, as well as functional impairments in academic and social contexts. The most recent research evidence uses correlational designs to show that ADHD is associated with problematic family functioning, including greater stress within the family, higher rates of parental psychopathology and conflicted parent-child relationships, which appears to be exacerbated in children with comorbid oppositional and conduct problems. However, there is an absence of literature that considers the role that parents play in contributing to children's development in areas such as academic achievement and peer competence, as well as the development of internalizing difficulties. Future research should examine family factors that are associated with resilience in children with ADHD, using longitudinal designs that reflect the dynamic changes associated with a developmental psychopathology framework.

A therapeutic summer weekend camp for grieving children: supporting clinical practice through empirical evaluation

Farber, M.L.Z. & Sabatino, C.A. (2007)

Through collaborative action-oriented community research, agency-based clinicians, and university-based researchers engaged in a two-year theory-driven evaluation of a therapeutic summer camp for grieving children. The evaluation examined the camp practice model and children's engagement in therapeutic camp activities and psychosocial functioning based on the camp staff and parental caregivers' assessments. The first year findings led to a synergistic decision-making process that strengthened one of camp therapeutic activities. The overall results reveal a high consistency among staff on assessments of engagement and psychosocial functioning, and parental caregivers' satisfaction with the camp. Limitations of research evaluation and implications for practice are considered.

A typology of caregiving situations and service use in family carers of older people in six European countries: The EUROFAMCARE study

Di Rosa M, Kofahl C, McKee K, Bień B, Lamura G, Prouskas C, et al. (2011)

This paper presents the EUROFAMCARE study findings, examining a typology of care situations for family carers of older people, and the interplay of carers with social and health services. Despite the complexity of family caregiving situations across Europe, our analyses determined the existence of seven "caregiving situations," varying on a range of critical indicators. Our study also describes the availability and use of different support services for carers and care receivers, and carers' preferences for the characteristics of support services. Our findings have relevance for policy initiatives in Europe, where limited resources need to be more equitably distributed and services should be targeted to caregiving situations reflecting the greatest need, and organized to reflect the preferences of family carers.

A World of Their Own Making:Myth Ritual and the Quest for Family Values

Gillis, J. (1996)

Our whole society may be obsessed with "family values," but as John Gillis points out in this entertaining and eye-opening book, most of our images of "home sweet home" are of very recent vintage. A World of Their Own Making questions our idealized notion of "The Family," a mind-set in which myth and symbol still hold sway. As the families we live with become more fragile, the symbolic families we live by become more powerful. Yet it is only by accepting the notion that our ritual, myths, and images must be open to perpetual revision that we can satisfy our human needs and changing circumstances.

AAC and literacy

Hetzroni, O. E. (2004)

Purpose: To review current research on the use of augmentative and alternative communication (AAC) for prompting literacy in children with special educational needs. Method: Research studies relevant to emergent literacy and AAC use are reviewed. Studies focused on acquisition of literacy across various populations of children with special needs are reviewed. Results: Existing literature suggests that AAC may provide strategies and systems to compensate for impairments and disabilities of individuals with severe communication disorders. Conclusion: AAC may support literacy learning in children with special educational needs.

AAC and Scripting Activities to Facilitate Communication and Play

Taylor, R. and T. Iacono (2003)

Many children with developmental disability have limited skills in both play and communication. In this study, the effects of a naturalistic intervention approach to play and symbolic communication was investigated within a single-subject multiple baseline design. The intervention involved scripting play activities and modelling vocabulary in speech and the augmentative and alternative communication (AAC) modality of sign. An additional intervention phase was introduced, wherein the AAC intervention was expanded to include an electronic communication device. The results indicated that modelling and scripted play activities resulted in increases in symbolic play, while changes in types of functional play were evident, while its frequency was somewhat erratic across baseline and intervention phases. Improvements in communication were more evident when a multimodal AAC approach was used in modelling than when sign was used alone. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2012 APA, all rights reserved)(journal abstract)

ABC for Parents: Pilot Study of a Universal 4-Session Program Shows Increased Parenting Skills, Self-efficacy and Child Well-Being.

Enebrink, P., Danneman, M., Benvestito Mattsson, V., Ulfsdotter, M., Jalling, C., & Lindberg, L. (2014)

The aim of the present pilot study was to provide an initial evaluation of a brief, 4-session, universal health promoting parenting group program, the "ABC". We examined the effects of the program on improving parental strategies, parental self-efficacy, and child well-being. We also hypothesized that in a health promoting intervention implemented in the general population, increased parental self-efficacy and parental strategies would be associated with improvements in child well-being after 4 months. Parents living in 11 municipalities and local community agencies in Sweden enrolled in the project were invited to participate in the study. A repeated measurement within group design was used to assess the effects. In total, parents of 104 children aged 2–12 years participated in the ABC-study. Parental and child outcomes were evaluated before, after the intervention, and at a 4-month follow-up with parental self-report questionnaires. Paired t tests and ANOVA repeated measures showed statistically significant improvements of parental strategies (showing guidance, empathy/understanding, having rules/boundaries), parental self-efficacy (self-competence, knowledge/experience), and child well-being (emotional well-being, independence) from pre- to post measurement, with small to moderate effect sizes. Improvements were maintained at the 4-month follow-up, apart from changes in parental knowledge. University education and increased pre- to post improvements in self-efficacy predicted child emotional well-being at the 4-month follow-up. The findings suggest that the ABC-group intervention was effective in terms of improving child well-being, parental strategies and self-efficacy. This pilot study provides promising evidence for the ABC as a universal parenting program but further more rigorous evaluations are needed.

Acceptable and unacceptable risk: balancing every day risk by family members by older cognitively impaired adults who live alone

Cott S, Tierny M (2013)

Abstract
For individuals providing care for older people the issue of risk is a well-established concern, especially in the context of the older person's declining functional abilities and cognitive skills. Recently in expert discussions of health care, the issue of risk has been subsumed under the discourse of patient safety with the assumption that risk is intrinsic to certain situations and therefore can be measured by professionals and ultimately prevented. Less attention has been paid to the risk perceptions of older persons and their families and friends. We undertook the study on which this article is based in Toronto, Ontario, Canada between 2005 and 2007. We used grounded theory to identify the process whereby family and friends recognise and balance risk of older persons with cognitive impairment who live alone. Twenty pairs of older adults with cognitive impairment and their primary family members or friends were interviewed using in-depth, semi-structured interviews. The model of acceptable and unacceptable risk began with family members' perceptions that the older person was living with an acceptable level of risk, but then noticing red flags that eventually led to the perception of unacceptable risk. They employed risk-balancing strategies such as making changes in the physical environment, increasing surveillance, becoming more involved in the older person's care or redefining their definitions of acceptable risk in order to return the perceived risk to an acceptable level. Meanings of risk were constantly redefined as new situations arose and risk-balancing strategies were implemented. Throughout family members constantly balanced the risks of physical harm with the risks of undermining the older person's independence and self-esteem.

Access to AAC: Present, past, and future

Higginbotham, D. J., Shane, H., Russell, S., & Caves, K. (2007)

Historically, access in augmentative and alternative communication (AAC) has been conceptualized as the physical operation of AAC technologies; more recently, research and development in the cognitive and social sciences has helped to broaden the concept to include a range of human factors involved in the successful use of AAC technologies in social interactions. The goal of this article is to expand the current understanding of communication access by providing a conceptual framework for examining AAC access, evaluating recent scientific and technical advances in the areas of AAC, and discussing the challenges to accessing AAC technologies for a range of communication activities.

Access to AAC: Present, past, and future.

Higginbotham, D. J., Shane, H., Russell, S., & Caves, K. (2007)

Historically, access in augmentative and alternative communication (AAC) has been conceptualized as the physical operation of AAC technologies; more recently, research and development in the cognitive and social sciences has helped to broaden the concept to include a range of human factors involved in the successful use of AAC technologies in social interactions. The goal of this article is to expand the current understanding of communication access by providing a conceptual framework for examining AAC access, evaluating recent scientific and technical advances in the areas of AAC, and discussing the challenges to accessing AAC technologies for a range of communication activities.

Access to augmentative and alternative communication: New technologies and clinical decision-making

Fager, S., Bardach, L., Russell, S., & Higginbotham, J. (2012)

Children with severe physical impairments require a variety of access options to augmentative and alternative communication (AAC) and computer technology. Access technologies have continued to develop, allowing children with severe motor control impairments greater independence and access to communication. This article will highlight new advances in access technology, including eye and head tracking, scanning, and access to mainstream technology, as well as discuss future advances. Considerations for clinical decision-making and implementation of these technologies will be presented along with case illustrations.

According to need? : Predicting use of formal and informal care in a Swedish urban elderly population

Larsson, K. (2004)

Avhandling

This dissertation studies factors that predict use of public eldercare, informal care, and purchase of private services in relation to an individual's needs, social network characteristics, and sociodemographic factors. A further purpose is to examine whether use of public eldercare is correlated to receipt of informal care and purchase of private services in the Swedish welfare state.The dissertation is based on the Kungsholmen Study, a population-based longitudinal study. Studies I–III used cross-sectional data from community-dwelling people aged 81-100 and examined (I) gender, (II) marital and parental status, and (III) dementia and depressive symptoms as predictors of use of home help. Study IV analyzed factors related to moving into institutional care and receipt of home help from 1994/96 to 2000.The majority of support provided to elders living in the community comes from informal sources, even among people living alone. There was considerable overlap between home help and informal care. When all sources of care were considered, childless individuals had comparatively lower odds of receiving care. Factors predicting use of public eldercare and informal care differed depending on whether or not elders coresided. No gender differences in use of formal and informal care were found when controlling for household composition. Living alone, dementia, need of help with household chores, and walking limitations increased the likelihood of using public eldercare. Coresidence, informal care from outside the household, and use of private services decreased the likelihood. Depressive symptoms increased the likelihood of receiving home help and institutionalization when using longitudinal data, but not in the cross-sectional studies. Educational level was of importance and interacted with several factors; persons with higher levels of education were advantaged. Very few people moved into institutional care without previously having received home help services. Essentially the same factors that predicted receipt of home help services also predicted institutionalization.

Action and embodiment within situated human interaction

Goodwin, C. (2000)

A theory of action must come to terms with both the details of language use and the way in which the social, cultural, material and sequential structure of the environment where action occurs figure into its organization. In this paper it will be suggested that a primordial site for the analysis of human language, cognition, and action consists of a situation in which multiple participants are attempting to carry out courses of action in concert with each other through talk while attending to both the larger activities that their current actions are ambedded within, and relevant phenomena in their surround. Using as data video recordings of young girls playing hopscotch and archaeologists classifying color, it will be argued that human action is built throught the simultaneous deployment of a range of quite different kinds of semiotic resources. Talk itself contains multiple sign systems with alternative properties. Strips of talk gain their power as social action via their placement within larger sequential structures, encompassing activities, and participation frameworks constituted through displays of mutual orientation made by the actors' bodies. The body is used in a quite different way to perform gesture, again a class of phenomena that encompasses structurally different types of sign systems. Both talk and gesture can index, construe or treat as irrelevant, entities in the participants' surround. Moreover, material structure in the surround, such as graphic fields of various types, can provide semiotic structure without which the constitution of particular kinds of action being invoked through talk would be impossible. In brief it will be argued that the construction of action through talk within situated interaction is accomplished through the temporally unfolding juxtaposition of quite different kinds of semiotic resources, and that moreover through this process the human body is made publicly visible as the site for a range of structurally different kinds of displays implicated in the constitution of the actions of the moment.

Action and embodiment within situated human interaction

Goodwin, C. (2000)

A theory of action must come to terms with both the details of language use and the way in which the social, cultural, material and sequential structure of the environment where action occurs figure into its organization. In this paper it will be suggested that a primordial site for the analysis of human language, cognition, and action consists of a situation in which multiple participants are attempting to carry out courses of action in concert with each other through talk while attending to both the larger activities that their current actions are ambedded within, and relevant phenomena in their surround. Using as data video recordings of young girls playing hopscotch and archaeologists classifying color, it will be argued that human action is built throught the simultaneous deployment of a range of quite different kinds of semiotic resources. Talk itself contains multiple sign systems with alternative properties. Strips of talk gain their power as social action via their placement within larger sequential structures, encompassing activities, and participation frameworks constituted through displays of mutual orientation made by the actors' bodies. The body is used in a quite different way to perform gesture, again a class of phenomena that encompasses structurally different types of sign systems. Both talk and gesture can index, construe or treat as irrelevant, entities in the participants' surround. Moreover, material structure in the surround, such as graphic fields of various types, can provide semiotic structure without which the constitution of particular kinds of action being invoked through talk would be impossible. In brief it will be argued that the construction of action through talk within situated interaction is accomplished through the temporally unfolding juxtaposition of quite different kinds of semiotic resources, and that moreover through this process the human body is made publicly visible as the site for a range of structurally different kinds of displays implicated in the constitution of the actions of the moment.

Action theory, disability and ICF

Nordenfelt L. (2003)

Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to make a critical analysis of the conceptual platform of the recently introduced International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health (ICF). Special attention is paid to the suggested definitions of the concepts of activity and participation. My argument intends to show that these definitions are not coherent. Methods: The theoretical platform of this paper is philosophical action theory. My argument makes particular use of the distinction between capacity and opportunity and shows that both concepts are applicable to all actions. Capacity and opportunity are distinguished from the actual performance of actions. The latter presupposes the existence of a will. On this conceptual basis follows an analysis of the distinction between activity and participation as conceived by the WHO in ICF. Conclusions: The main conclusion of my reasoning is that the notions of activity and participation in ICF partly rest on confusion between capacity for action and the actual performance of an action. If my conclusion is sound this has far-reaching consequences for the application of the ICF in the practice of rehabilitation. My diagnosis therefore is that the conceptual framework of ICF is in great need of a strict action – theoretic reconstruction.

Actions helping expressed or anticipated needs: Patients with advanced cancer and their family caregivers' experiences of specialist palliative home care teams

Klarare A., Rasmussen BH., Fossum B., Hansson J., Fürst CJ., Lundh Hagelin C. (2018)

Abstract
Patients with advanced cancer and family caregivers in palliative care face physical, psychological, social and existential challenges, much of the time home alone. Specialist palliative home care team services can be instrumental for sense of security in an uncertain situation. The aim of this study was to describe patients' and family caregivers' experiences of specialist palliative home care team actions that are identified by the participants as helping or hindering interventions. Six patients and seven family caregivers were interviewed using the enhanced critical incident technique. Ninety-five critical incidents and wish list items were identified. Providing adequate resources, keeping promises and being reliable, and creating partnerships are actions by specialist palliative care teams that patients and family caregiversexperienced as helping in meeting expressed or anticipated needs in patients and family caregivers. Being reliable and including patients and family caregivers in partnerships help to continue with daily life, even though death may be close. Unmet needs resulted in experiences of disrespect or violation of personal space/integrity.

Activity and participation in home rehabilitation: older people's and family members' perspectives

Randström KB, Kenneth A, Svedlund M, Paulson M. (2013)

Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To explore the experiences of older people and their supporting family members in relation to home rehabilitation, with a focus on activity and participation.
METHODS: Qualitative interviews were carried out with 6 older people and 6 family members at 1 and 6 months after the older person's discharge to their home. Qualitative content analysis of the data was carried out. The International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health provides a guiding framework for rehabilitation.
RESULTS: Informants' experiences of home rehabilitation contributed to the formation of 6 categories: (i) living with a frail body; (ii) striving for well-being in daily life; (iii) being close at hand; (iv) feeling dependent in daily life; (v) struggling to carry on; and (vi) striving to be at home.
CONCLUSION: Older people's goals were to return to daily routines and to perform meaningful activities without feeling dependent on other people. Family members' participation was crucial. Psychosocial support and autonomy were essential for facilitating activity and participation. Healthcare professionals should consider each individual's unique experiences along with the significance of being at home

Activity participation of children with complex communication needs, physical disabilities and typically-developing peers

Raghavendra P, Virgo R, Olsson C, Connell T, Lane AE. (2011)

Objective: To describe and compare the context of participation of children with physical disabilities and complex communication needs (Group CCN) in out-of-school activities with children with physical disabilities only (Group PD) and typically-developing peers (Group TD).
Method: A cross-sectional, matched, multi-group design was used. Thirty-nine participants between 10–15 years of age were administered the Children's Assessment of Participation and Enjoyment.
Results: Kruskall-Wallis analyses revealed that there were significant differences among the three groups for overall location, enjoyment of the activities and with whom they did the social and self-improvement activities with. Mean trends showed that Group CCN participated in activities closer to home rather than in the community, were restricted in social participation and reported higher levels of enjoyment in activity participation than the other two groups.
Conclusions: Group CCN appeared to experience differences in participation when compared to peers with and without disability.

Addressing Substance Abuse Treatment Needs of Parents Involved with the Child Welfare System.

Oliveros A, Kaufman J. (2011)

The goal of this paper is to synthesize available data to help guide policy and programmatic initiatives for families with substance abuse problems that are involved with the child welfare system, and identify gaps in the research base needed to further refine practices in this area. To date, Family Treatment Drug Court and newly developed home-based substance abuse treatment interventions appear the most effective at improving substance abuse treatment initiation and completion in child welfare populations. Research is needed to compare the efficacy of these two approaches, and examine cost and child well-being indicators in addition to substance abuse treatment and child welfare outcomes.

Keywords: Substance Abuse, Child Welfare, Treatment

ADHD in Swedish 3- to 7-year-old children

Kadesjö C, Kadesjö B, Hägglöf B, Gillberg C. (2001)

Objective: To study characteristics of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) in a representative group of clinically impaired young children in Sweden with the disorder. Method: One hundred thirty-one children with ADHD (aged 3–7 years) were examined, and their parents were interviewed. Independent parent questionnaire data (Child Behavior Checklist, ADHD Rating Scale-IV, Conners) were collected. For comparison 131 children without ADHD were matched for age, gender, parents' marital status, child's adoption status, and social class. Results: Children with ADHD had extremely high ADHD symptom levels—on average four to eight times higher than the comparison group. Sociodemographic correlates of ADHD symptoms were more pronounced in parent questionnaire data than in parent interview data, underscoring the importance of diagnostic interview when dealing with clinical issues. Very few of the children with ADHD (6%) appeared "normal" with regard to attention/activity level at clinical examination.Conclusions: Clinic children with a diagnosis of DSMIV ADHD have typical and impairing symptoms already before starting school. The variance of ADHD in this age group appears to be accounted for by primary psychosocial factors only to a limited degree. It would seem reasonable to establish supportive and treatment measures for these young children so that the psychosocial and academic problems shown by so many individuals with ADHD later in their development might be reduced.

Adjö Herr Muffin

Ulf Nilsson, Anna-Clara Tidholm (2003)

Herr Muffin är ett marsvin som nu är gammal, trött och har ont i magen. Han tänker tillbaka på sitt liv och hur bra han har haft det. Han har haft fru och sex lurviga ungar, fått mycket gurka och hö. En dag ligger ett brev i hans postlåda och i brevet står det "Jag är ledsen för att pappa säger att när ett marsvin är gammal kan det plötsligt dö...." Boken om Herr Muffin berättar om ålderdom och död på ett fint och stillsamt sätt. En bilderbok som passar barn från 3 år.

Adolescence and borderline behavior—Between personality development and personality disorder

Streeck-Fischer, A. (2013)

Background: In recent years, an increasing interest in personality disorders in childhood and adolescence has been observed. This is partly due to recent findings of temperament, personality and neurobiological research. Method: This article reviews the history of the concept of borderline conditions in children and adolescents, and presents recent evidence from developmental psychology and neurobiology to support the diagnosis in adolescents as a disorder of development. An overview of treatment based on the decades-long experience with these patients at the Tiefenbrunn Clinic in Germany is described. Results: While the term personality disorder implies enduring traits, the evidence suggests that it is relatively unstable in adults as well as adolescents. Concerns about labeling adolescents with a presumably lifelong condition have hampered research on pathogenesis and treatment. Nevertheless, some adolescents with severe impairments in functioning do meet adult criteria for BPD, and do respond to the tailored treatment approaches that have been developed for them. Conclusions: The psychopathology of adolescents with BPD is probably a result of the interaction of the adolescent developmental process and defects in attachment and mentalization similar to those in adults with BPD. The term "developmental borderline personality disorder" is suggested to reflect the fluidity of this condition. Appropriate intervention requires a comprehensive multimodal approach in which individual therapy takes place within a protective framework of boundaries and limits.

Adolescent alcohol expectancies in relation to personal and parental drinking patterns

Brown SA, Creamer VA, Stetson BA. (1987)

Increased expectations of positive effects of alcohol have been associated with severity of drinking across a variety of abusing and nonabusing adult populations. Although alcohol expectancies have been examined among high school adolescents, no study has examined expectancies of identified adolescent abusers in treatment. This study investigated whether adolescent alcohol abusers in treatment expect significantly more reinforcement from alcohol than do nonabusing peers and whether expectancies vary as a function of exposure to parental alcohol abuse. The adolescent version of the Alcohol Expectancy Questionnaire (Christiansen, Goldman, & Inn, 1982) was completed by 116 abusing and nonabusing adolescents. Results indicate that adolescent alcohol abusers expect significantly more reinforcement from alcohol than do demographically comparable nonabusing peers. Adolescents with an alcohol-abusing parent reported expecting more cognitive and motor enhancement from drinking than did adolescents without a family history of abuse. Thus, both personal alcohol use and parental alcohol use are related to adolescent alcohol expectancies. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2016 APA, all rights reserved)

Adolescent drug abuse: helping families survive. International journal of mental health nursing

Usher K, Jackson D, O'Brien L. (2005)

Drug use and abuse carries risk in people of all ages. However, adolescents are particularly vulnerable to substance misuse. Adolescent drug use continues to be an area of concern with a number of adolescents developing problems associated with the use of various drugs. Negative sequelae associated with adolescent drug use include areas such as schooling, health, and family relationships. Difficulties with the legal system, schooling, or within the family are commonly the triggers for recognition of substance misuse problems in a young person. However, problems are usually well-established before they are recognized. The challenge of dealing with these problems will fall on families, particularly parents. This is a crisis for families, and ongoing support is needed if they are to overcome the challenges. Health workers (including nurses) are well-positioned to support families who are dealing with adolescent drug problems. In this paper we propose the adoption of a strengths approach as a strategy for developing resilience in families.

Longitudinal mediators of a randomized prevention program effect on cortisol for youth from parentally bereaved families

Luecken, L., Hagan, M.J, Sandler, I.N., Tein, J., Ayers, T.S., & Wolchik, S.A. (2014)

Abstract
We recently reported that a randomized controlled trial of a family-focused intervention for parentally bereaved youth predicted higher cortisol output 6 years later relative to a control group of bereaved youth (Luecken et al., Psychoneuroendocrinology 35, 785-789, 2010). The current study evaluated longitudinal mediators of the intervention effect on cortisol 6 years later. Parentally bereaved children (N = 139; mean age, 11.4; SD = 2.4; age range = 8-16 years; male; 61% Caucasian, 17% Hispanic, 7% African American, and 15% other ethnicities) were randomly assigned to the 12-week preventive intervention (n = 78) or a self-study control (n = 61) condition. Six years later (mean age, 17.5; SD, 2.4), cortisol was sampled as youth participated in a parent-child conflict interaction task. Using four waves of data across the 6 years, longitudinal mediators of the program impact on cortisol were evaluated. Program-induced increases in positive parenting, decreases in child exposure to negative life events, and lower externalizing symptoms significantly mediated the intervention effect on cortisol 6 years later.

Longitudinal Relationships between Sibling Behavioral Adjustment and Behavior Problems of Children with Developmental Disabilities

Hastings, Richard, P. (2007)

Siblings of children with developmental disabilities were assessed twice, 2 years apart (N = 75 at Time 1, N = 56 at Time 2). Behavioral adjustment of the siblings and their brother or sister with developmental disability was assessed. Comparisons of adjustment for siblings of children with autism, Down syndrome, and mixed etiology mental retardation failed to identify group differences. Regression analysis showed that the behavior problems of the child with developmental disability at Time 1, but not the change in their behavior over time, predicted sibling adjustment over 2 years. There was no evidence that this putative temporal relationship operated bidirectionally: sibling adjustment did not appear to be related to the behavior problems of the children with developmental disabilities over time.

Long-term effects of a group support program and an individual support program for informal caregivers of stroke patients: which caregivers benefit the most?

van den Heuvel ET, Witte LP, Stewart RE, Schure LM, Sanderman R, Meyboom-de Jong B. (2002)

In this article, we report the long-term outcomes of an intervention for informal caregivers who are the main provider of stroke survivors' emotional and physical support. Based on the stress-coping theory of Lazarus and Folkman two intervention designs were developed: a group support program and individual home visits. Both designs aimed at an increase in caregivers' active coping and knowledge, reducing caregivers' strain and improving well-being and social support. Caregivers were interviewed before entering the program, and 1 and 6 months after completion of the program. After 6 months, 100 participants remained in the group program, 49 in the home visit program, and 38 in the control group. Multiple stepwise regression analysis was used to determine the effects of the interventions. In the long-term, the interventions (group program and home visits together) contributed to a small to medium increase in confidence in knowledge and the use of an active coping strategy. The amount of social support remained stable in the intervention groups, whereas it decreased in the control group. The same results were found when only the group program was compared with the control group. However, no significant differences between the home visit group and the participants in the group support program were found. Younger female caregivers benefit the most from the interventions. They show greater gains in confidence in knowledge about patient-care and the amount of social support received compared with other caregivers.

Loss and grief in patients with Schizophrenia: Onliving in another world

Mauritz M, Van Meijel B. (2009)

AIM:
Schizophrenia enormously impacts the lives of the patients who have this psychiatric disorder. This study addresses the lived experience of grief in schizophrenia.
METHOD:
A qualitative study based on the grounded theory was designed. Ten patients were interviewed in depth on their feelings of loss and ways of coping.
RESULTS:
All respondents experienced significant feelings of loss. Internal and external losses were distinguished. Respondents dealt with their losses by accepting their diagnosis and treatment, identifying with other patients, learning about schizophrenia, and searching for meaning.
DISCUSSION:
Respondents were able to identify their significant losses and verbalize the accompanied feelings. They went through an intensive grieving process that to a certain extent led to coming to terms. During the interviews, the presence of grief was evident, whereas clinical depression was excluded.
CLINICAL IMPLICATIONS:
Interventions may be improved by the following factors: (a) optimal assessment and treatment of symptoms; (b) adequate information about symptoms, treatment and its effects, and prognosis; (c) opportunities to identify with other patients; (d) strengthening of social support; and (e) a relationship of trust with care providers based on an accepting attitude.

Manual for the ASEBA Preschool Forms and Profiles

Achenbach TM, Rescorla LA. (2000)

The Manual for the ASEBA preschool forms & profiles explains the development, standardization, applications, & profiles for the CBCL//l½-5 and C-TRF. The Manual also provides reliability & validity data, case illustrations, problem prevalence rates, scale scores, scoring instructions, & answers to common questions. 180 pp.

Mapping images to objects by young adults with cognitive disabilities

Carmien, S. & Wohldman E. (2008)

How the type of representation (icons, photos of objects in context, photos of objects in isolation) displayed on a hand-held computer affected recognition performance in young adults with cognitive disabilities was examined. Participants were required to match an object displayed on the computer to one of three pictures projected onto a screen. We tested the opinion widely held by occupational therapists and special education professionals that there is an inverse relationship between cognitive ability and the required fidelity of a representation for a successful match between a representation and an external object. Despite their widespread use in most learning tools developed for persons with cognitive disabilities, our results suggest that icons are poor substitutes for realistic representations.

Marketisation in Nordic eldercare: a research report on legislation, oversight, extent and consequences.

Meagher G, Szebehely M, editors (2013)

The Nordic countries share a tradition of universal, tax-financed eldercare services, centred on public provision. Yet Nordic eldercare has not escaped the influence of the global wave of marketisation in recent years. Marketinspired measures, such as competitive tendering and user choice models, have been introduced in all Nordic countries, and in some countries, there has been an increase of private, for-profit provision of care services. This report is the first effort to comprehensively document the process of marketisation in Sweden, Finland, Denmark and Norway. The report seeks to answer the following questions: What kinds of market reforms have been carried out in Nordic eldercare systems? What is the extent of privately provided services? How is the quality of marketised monitored? What has the impact of marketisation been on users of eldercare, on care workers and on eldercare systems? Are marketisation trends similar in the four countries, or are there major differences between them? The report also includes analyses of aspects of marketisation in Canada and the United States, where there is a longer history of markets in care. These contributions offer some perhaps salutary warnings for the Nordic countries about the risks of increasing competition and private provision in eldercare. The authors of this report, representing seven countries, are all members of the Nordic Research Network on Marketisation in Eldercare (Normacare). The report has been edited by Professor Gabrielle Meagher, University of Sydney and Professor Marta Szebehely, Stockholm University. Our hope is that the report will provide both a foundation and an inspiration for further research on change in Nordic eldercare.

På väg mot hela vägen. En utvärdering av ”Hela vägens psykiatri” i Gävleborg

Finn, Bengt & Bromark, Kristina (2011)

En rad tragiska händelser i början av 2000-talet som får stor massmedial uppmärksamhet är startpunkten för utredningen Nationell psykiatrisamordning. Utredningen syftade till att se över flera av de områden som berör social omsorg och rehabilitering av personer med psykisk sjukdom eller psykiska funktionsnedsättningar. Statliga stimulansmedel avsattes att användas till kompetenshöjande åtgärder för "baspersonal" inom landstingets psykiatri och kommunernas socialtjänst. 2008 ansökte sex kommuner i Hälsingland och landstinget i Gävleborg om dessa medel och projektet som startas får namnet "Hela vägens psykiatri i Gävleborg".
Det övergripande målet med projektet "Hela vägens psykiatri i Gävleborg" är att förstärka kompetensen bland personal som i sitt dagliga arbete kommer i kontakt med personer med psykisk sjukdom eller psykisk funktionsnedsättning. Kompetenssatsningen syftar till att öka den enskildes (brukarens/patientens) möjligheter till integration i samhället och att leva ett självständigt liv.

Relatives' experiences of the Boston Psychiatric Rehabilitation approach: a qualitative study.

Jormfeldt H, Svensson B, Hansson L, Svedberg P. (2014)

The Boston Psychiatric Rehabilitation (BPR) approach is individualized and
characterized by being based entirely on the individual's unique needs and
preferences in the areas of working, learning, social contacts, and living
environment. Relatives of clients in mental health services influence the
client's possibilities for recovery by their everyday relationship. Relatives
have, however, traditionally had a subordinated role in the care of their
mentally ill family member. The perspective of relatives is an important aspect
in the development of new approaches to psychiatric rehabilitation. The purpose
of this study was thus to describe and explore relatives' experiences of the BPR
approach. Ten relatives of clients in mental health services taking part in the
BPR were interviewed. The interviews were transcribed and analyzed with a
qualitative content analysis method to explore relatives' experiences of the BPR
intervention in a county in Sweden. The findings from the interviews could be
summarized in the theme "To meet the clients' needs" consisting of three
categories: "Dependence on staffs' competence," "Responsibility for user
involvement," and "The necessity for coordination between authorities and
caregivers." The findings suggest that relatives may contribute with important
information about clients' needs related to outcome of care. Relatives'
perspectives may be of importance in future development of BPR. Further research
about the relatives' role in psychiatric rehabilitation is needed as well as
studies that compare different kinds of psychiatric rehabilitation from the
perspective of relatives.

Relatives of psychiatric inpatients – do physical violence and suicide attempts of patients influence family burden and participation in care?

Kjellin, Lars & Östman, Margareta (2005)

A common concern of psychiatric patients' relatives is that patients might be a danger to themselves or others. The aim of this study was to investigate family burden and relatives' participation in care in relation to physical violence towards others and suicide attempts by psychiatric inpatients before admission. Information concerning violence and suicide attempts by the patients prior to admission was collected from the medical records of 155 acutely voluntarily and involuntarily admitted psychiatric inpatients. Relatives were interviewed a month after admission, using a semi-structured questionnaire. Violence towards other persons and suicide attempts were recorded in 16% and 17% of the cases, respectively. There were no differences between relatives of patients who had been violent and other relatives regarding burden and participation in care. Relatives of patients with suicide attempts more often stated they had been prevented from having own company, worried about suicide attempts by the patient, had mental health problems of their own, and had own need for care and support. It was concluded that violence of acutely admitted psychiatric patients, targeted at other people, was not associated with burden of family, but the results corroborate the need for psychiatric services to involve and support relatives of psychiatric patients with suicidal behaviour.

Resilience Among Children Exposed to Domestic Violence: The Role of Risk and Protective Factors

Martinez-Torteya, C., Bogat, G. A., von Eye, A., & Levendosky, A. A. (2009)

Individual and family characteristics that predict resilience among children exposed to domestic violence (DV) were examined. Mother-child dyads (n = 190) were assessed when the children were 2, 3, and 4 years of age. DV-exposed children were 3.7 times more likely than nonexposed children to develop internalizing or externalizing problems. However, 54% of DV-exposed children maintained positive adaptation and were characterized by easy temperament (odds ratio [OR] = .39, d = .52) and nondepressed mothers (OR = 1.14, d = .07), as compared to their nonresilient counterparts. Chronic DV was associated with maternal depression, difficult child temperament, and internalizing or externalizing symptoms. Results underscore heterogeneous outcomes among DV-exposed children and the influence of individual and family characteristics on children's adaptation.

Scoping studies: towards a methodological framework

Arksey, H., & O'Malley, L. (2005)

This paper focuses on scoping studies, an approach to reviewing the literature which to date has received little attention in the research methods literature. We distinguish between different types of scoping studies and indicate where these stand in relation to full systematic reviews. We outline a framework for conducting a scoping study based on our recent experiences of reviewing the literature on services for carers for people with mental health problems. Where appropriate, our approach to scoping the field is contrasted with the procedures followed in systematic reviews. We emphasize how including a consultation exercise in this sort of study may enhance the results, making them more useful to policy makers, practitioners and service users. Finally, we consider the advantages and limitations of the approach and suggest that a wider debate is called for about the role of the scoping study in relation to other types of literature reviews.

Self-reported exposure to intimate partner violence among women and men in Sweden: results from a population-based survey

Nybergh, L., Taft, C., Enander, V., & Krantz, G. (2013)

Background
Few population-based studies assessing IPV among randomly selected women and men have been conducted in Sweden. Hence, the aim of the current study was to explore self-reported exposure, associated factors, social and behavioural consequences of and reasons given for using psychological, physical and sexual intimate partner violence (IPV) among women and men residing in Sweden.

Methods
Cross-sectional postal survey of women and men aged 18–65 years. Bivariate and multivariate logistic regression analyses were used to identify factors associated with exposure to IPV.

Results
Past-year IPV exposure rates were similar in women and men; however, earlier-in-life estimates were higher in women. Poor to moderate social support, growing up with domestic violence and being single, widowed or divorced were associated with exposure to all forms of IPV in men and women. Women and men tended to report different social consequences of IPV.

Conclusions
Our finding that women reported greater exposure to IPV earlier-in-life but not during the past year suggests the importance of taking this time frame into account when assessing gender differences in IPV. In-depth, qualitative studies that consider masculinities, femininities power and gender orders would be beneficial for extending and deepening our understanding of the gendered matter of IPV.

Siblings of Children With Disabilities: Research Themes

Stoneman, Zolinda (2005)

Until the early 1980s, most researchers paid little attention to sibling relationships. Studies of mothers dominated the research agenda, to the almost total exclusion of fathers, extended families, and siblings. Although in early classic studies of families of children with disabilities, investigators embraced a family systems approach that included siblings (i.e., Farber & Jenne, 1963), this emphasis did not take root until recently. There has been an impressive growth in the number of published studies focusing on siblings of children with disabilities. In this paper, my goal is to examine themes in this research and reflect on our state of knowledge.

Spouses' quality of life 1 year after stroke: prediction at the start of clinical rehabilitation

Visser-Meily A, Post M, Schepers V, Lindeman E. (2005)

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE:
The purpose of this prospective study was to identify early predictors of spouses' quality of life at 1 year after stroke.
METHODS:
At the start of clinical rehabilitation patient and caregiver characteristics, psychological factors, harmony in the relationship and social support were assessed. One year after stroke, caregiver burden (Caregiver Strain Index), life satisfaction (Life Satisfaction Checklist) and depressive symptoms (Goldberg Depression Scale) were assessed in 187 participants. Multiple regression analyses were performed.
RESULTS:
About 80% of the spouses reported low quality of life on one or more of the measures; 52% reported depressive symptoms, 54% significant strain and only 50% was satisfied with life as a whole. The regression analysis identified 'passive coping strategy of the caregiver' as the most important predictor. ADL dependency was the only baseline patient characteristic significantly related to burden and life satisfaction, but explained just 0-4% of the variance.
CONCLUSIONS:
A large proportion of caregivers perceive impaired quality of life 1 year after stroke. Caregivers at risk should be identified at the start of rehabilitation by means of coping measurement instruments or selected anamneses on coping.
2005 S. Karger AG, Basel

Striving to survive: Families’ lived experiences when a child is diagnosed with cancer

Björk, Maria, Wiebe, Thomas, Hallström Inger (2005)

When a child is ill with cancer, this affects the whole family for long periods. The aim of this study was to elucidate the family's lived experience when a child in the family was diagnosed with cancer. A descriptive inductive design with a hermeneutic phenomenological approach including interviews with 17 families (parents, children, and siblings) was chosen. The families' lived experience was described as a 2-fold essential theme comprising "a broken life world" and an immediate "striving to survive." The families' secure everyday life disappeared and was replaced by fear, chaos, and loneliness. When striving to make the child and the family survive, family members strove to feel hope and have a positive focus, to gain control, and to feel close to other people. Phenomenological human science research can deepen the understanding of the meaning of being a family with a child who is ill with cancer and can help pediatric oncology staff become increasingly thoughtful, and thus better prepared to take action to diminish the chaos occurring in the family.

Supportive groups for siblings of pediatric oncology patients: impact on anxiety

Houtzager, B. A., Grootenhuis, B. F. & Last, B. F. (2001)

Childhood cancer can have a substantial emotional impact on the siblings of the sick child. In order to help these siblings adjust to the illness, supportive groups were started in 1994 at our medical center. The program is based on a model of psychosocial support; the aim of the group is to enhance control strategies and, thus, to reduce anxiety. It consists of five sessions and is offered to siblings aged 7–18. The study objective is to evaluate the effect of group participation on sibling anxiety. The State Trait Anxiety Inventory for Children was administered to 24 siblings before and after group participation.

Results showed that siblings experience less anxiety after participating in the group. Before group participation, a majority of the siblings were more anxious compared with normal peers. The sibling's age and sex, whether the ill child is in treatment, survival perspective, and time since diagnosis were not related to anxiety reduction. The continuation of the group is supported by its positive impact on siblings. Results must nevertheless be interpreted cautiously, considering the small number of siblings participating in the study, the lack of a control group and the restriction to one outcome measure.

Survivors of suicide do grieve differently: Empirical evidence for a common sense proposition

Bailley, S.E., Kral, M.J., & Dunham, K. (1999)

Previous empirical investigations have produced mixed results on the question of whether mode of death differentially affects grief. To further investigate the influence of suicide on grief, 350 previously bereaved university students completed a questionnaire package consisting of several standardized measures. Participants were separated into four groups based on the mode of death experienced as either survivors of suicide (n = 34), accident (n = 57), unanticipated natural (n = 102), or anticipated natural (n = 157) deaths. Hierarchical multiple regression analyses indicated that suicide survivors, compared against the other groups, experienced more frequent feelings of rejection, responsibility, "unique" reactions, and more total grief reactions. Trends indicating increased levels of shame and perceived stigmatization were also evident. Aggregate factors of death "naturalness" and "expectedness" showed less influence than mode of death in influencing grief. Overall, results support previous clinical and research findings and intuitive logic in demonstrating that the grief experienced by suicide survivors includes elements that are less frequently seen in the case of nonsuicidal deaths.

The Behavior Management Flow Chart: a component analysis of behavior management strategies

Danforth, J. S. (1998)

Representative published child behavior management research was reviewed. Based upon the review, a task analysis of child behavior management strategies was conducted. The Behavior Management Flow Chart is a flow chart of the task analysis that synthesizes the research into a cohesive unit and visually depicts actions that adults may be trained to use to manage misbehavior displayed by disruptive children. A discussion compares and contrasts the Behavior Management Flow Chart with Hanf-model behavior management programs, the appropriate unit of analysis is examined, and concerns regarding integrating a wide range of research variables into a unitary model are addressed.

The child´s worries about the mother´s breast cancer: Sources of distress in school-age children

Zahlis, E.H. (2001)

Abstract
PURPOSE/OBJECTIVES:
To describe children's worries when their mothers are newly diagnosed with early-stage breast cancer.
DESIGN:
Descriptive, qualitative study.
SETTING:
Private family homes.
SAMPLE:
Case intensive interviews with 16 children who ranged in age from 11-18 years at the time that interviews were conducted and who had been 8-12 years of age when their mothers were diagnosed with early-stage breast cancer.
METHODS:
Semistructured interviews with the children were audiorecorded, transcribed, and inductively coded into categories of distinct worries about their mothers' breast cancer.
MAIN RESEARCH VARIABLES:
Children's descriptions of their worries and confusion resulting from their mothers' breast cancer diagnoses.
FINDINGS:
The children voiced nine categories of worry during the interviews: worrying that the mother was going to die; feeling confused; worrying that something bad would happen; worrying about the family and others; worrying when the mother did not look good; worrying that their mothers would change; wondering if the family would have to cut back financially; worrying about talking to others; and wondering if they, the children, would get cancer.
CONCLUSIONS:
Children of mothers with breast cancer experience multiple worries concerning their mothers, their families, and themselves. The data revealed that they attempted to make sense of their mothers' illness for themselves and imagined how it might affect their own lives in the future.
IMPLICATIONS FOR NURSING PRACTICE:
Programs and materials need to be developed that help parents address the multiple worries that children whose mothers have early-stage breast cancer experience.

The Consequences of Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder in Adults

Goodman, D. W. (2007)

Until recently, attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) was a diagnosis reserved for children and adolescents as it was believed to dissipate before adulthood. New evidence, however, supports the persistence of ADHD beyond adolescence, and it is now recognized as a chronic neurobehavioral disorder in adults. Adults with ADHD have difficulties with school, work, family interactions, and social activities. Although treatments are available for adult ADHD, many patients never receive an accurate diagnosis that would afford them appropriate therapeutic intervention. If left untreated, adult ADHD can cause significant personal, social, and economic burdens that can have a negative impact on overall quality of life. This article discusses how ADHD presents in adults and the effects of the disorder on educational, occupational, interpersonal, and social functioning. Currently available treatments for ADHD in adults are also reviewed.

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