Title: Think Child, Think Parent, Think Family
1Think Child, Think Parent, Think Family
- Impact of parental vulnerability on children
- Early and quickly is better
- Dr Adrian Falkov
- Senior Staff Specialist
- Sydney West CAMHS
- adrianfalkov_at_optusnet.com.au
2We Know
- Multiple adversities vulnerabilities
demonstrated current, lifelong generational
impact - Interplay genetic psychosocial adversity,
vulnerability resilience Negative outcomes
not inevitable - Multiple (competing) needs (adult vs child MH vs
Social care CP vs family support) - Prevalence of MI parenthood across all service
sectors tiers - Parenthood amongst AMH SMS (pts who are
parents) - MIPs of families known to childrens services
- Comorbidity - MI, Substance Misuse PD
3- Major public health opportunity - implics for
better identification, intervention prevention
- Improving life chances lived experiences for
parents children - Family as NB target mechanism for change
- If parents do better so will children
- If children do better so will parents
- Investment opportunity early intervention,
economic benefits of promoting enhancing
resilience - Neglect has life threatening consequences
4 - Stigma discrimination shame isolation
- Disruption to daily life chaotic lifestyle,
lack of routines, parental hospitalisation - Developmentally inappropriate roles
responsibilities (young carers) - poor parent-child interaction marked by parental
disinterest, hostility, less involvement and poor
communication - Loss feelings of confusion, uncertainty, fear
anxiousness, anger loyalty - Poor understanding about the meaning of parental
actions and concern about developing mental
illness themselves - Greater risks of emotional behavioural problems
- fear of being removed from the family
5Also
- Tragedies (fatalities) highlight dangers of poor
communicatn co-ordinatn between services - Systems failures organisational malaise
including insufficient AND poor use of resources - Social capital, investment opportunities through
improving life chances lived experiences for
parents children - Effective treatment rehab approaches
- Management leadership issues
6And
- At some point in their lives, I believe, most
human beings desire to have children and desire
also that their children should grow up to be
healthy, happy, self reliant. - For those who succeed the rewards are great but
for those who have children but fail to rear them
to be healthy, happy self reliant the penalties
in anxiety, frustration, friction perhaps shame
or guilt, may be severe. - Engaging in parenthood therefore is playing for
high stakes. - Furthermore, because successful parenting is a
principle key to the mental health of the next
generation, we need to know all we can both about
its nature about the manifold social
psychological conditions that influence its
development for better or for worse - John Bowlby Caring for Children
- A Secure Base Parent-Child Attachment Healthy
Human Development
7The Family Genes Recurrent, early onset Major
Depression
- Onset depr in chhood a single MDD assoc with
nearly 50 chance of recurrence in future (Kovacs
96) - Chhood dysthymia 78 chance of subsequent MDD
(Kovacs 96) - A parent or sib with MDD has 2-3 fold greater
risk for depr compared to gen popn risk (10) - If the relative has severe, earlier onset
(childhood / teens / 20s), recurrent MDD the risk
becomes 4-5 X greater - About 50 of predisposition / heritability
accounted for by genes - Multi locus patterns of inheritance
- Genetic vulnerability coupled to early adversity
(abuse and neglect), life events and loss imposes
even greater levels of risk
8Gene environment interplay
- Caspi et al (03) longit study 5-HTTLPR
(serotonin transporter gene-linked polymorphic
region) - Number of life events predicted subsequent
depression according to number of short alleles
at 5-HTTLPR position - Sim interaction for effect on depression of no of
chhood maltreatment indices between ages 3-11 - Neither depr scores nor MDD predicted by genotype
alone - It is the interplay between and cumulative effect
of gene environment influences
9So What should it look like?
- Adults
- briefer, less frequent illness episodes
- Reduced hosp, relapse
- Improved cap to meet childrens neds
- Harmonious relationships, social connections
- Productive roles, educ employment
- Children
- Better self esteem, resilience
- Improved cognitive, emotional, behavioural fning
- Opportunities to achieve have fun ed
attainment - Reduced stigma, shame, isolation
- Harmonious relationships
- Understanding parents illness
- Families
- Cohesion, harmony happiness as a result of
accessible flexible equitable safe responsive
services
10Comprehensive service?
- Diagnostic
- Severity
- Population-based
- All family members
- Individuals v relationships
- MH Promotion, prevention
11A Vision For Change?
- Multiple, competing perspectives
- Across profession, team, service, agency
- Working better together everyones
responsibility - Building AND Crossing Bridges
- Shared understanding, role clarity common
purpose Of course, but HOW? - Role of mental health-illness for staff in chs
services - Prof awareness, knowledge, skills re MH of
children their parents/carers - Impact of vuln ch on parents
- Impact of vuln P on children
- Identify, assess, intervene, evaluate
- Family focussed, developmentally informed
- Strengths-based, protection oriented
12But Challenges and Dilemmas
- What does think child parent family mean?
- Dual diagnosis, Ingredients of complexity
- Thinking v Doing (Implementation)
- How will we know? (Evaluation)
- Information sharing v confidentiality
- Support v protection, Vulnerability v resilience
- Common experiences, competing needs
- Must v should
- Resources - Service v science imperatives
13Invisible Children AMH Perspectives
- You know, the thing is, the kids are important
but theres always so much going on, so much to
do that you, well, you go in with good
intentions but theyre so ill (pts), or chaotic
or needy or doing worrying things that you, well,
you kind of I guess just forget. I know I
shouldnt but thats what happens
14Childrens UnderstandingTom, Aged 7
- Its not like a tummy ache or a cold - but she's
not feeling well. She thinks she's the king,
then I know something's wrong - in the neck -
where she speaks, (or maybe) the heart - it's a
very important part of the body- makes you do
things, or maybe the mind - not the brain because
the brain is just to make you think the illness
is the things she says
15Young Carers - Liz Aged 11
- When I was younger, mum had a problem. She had
difficulty with us 4 kids - sorting us out for
school - she wasnt getting a lot of help and she
was shouting a lot. Her words were all jumbled
up - didnt come out properly. She was having
too many cups of tea... Always asking me for cups
of tea so i was late for school. I told the
teachers an excuse that mum overslept and I had
to make breakfast for the younger ones - mum
didnt want them to know she was sick because she
thought they were watching her and coming round - Liz went on to state that she thought it very
unlikely anyone was watching because if there
were watchers Id have seen them - but I didnt
tell mum this because she would have said how do
you know its unlikely?
16Family mental health More support, better
connections
- Mental illnesses are often accompanied by the
undefined burden that is borne by families of
affected individuals and the community in terms
of human and economic costs, as well as the
hidden burden of stigma and human rights
violations that may be encountered by this
vulnerable section of the community - Commonwealth Department of Health and Aged Care,
2000
17What does Think Child Parent Family Mean?
- "When I use a word", Humpty Dumpty said, in a
rather scornful tone, "it means what I choose it
to mean, neither more nor less - "The question is," said Alice, "whether you can
make words mean so many different things"
Lewis Carroll - Definition normal vs abnormal / vulnerable
- Who? which individuals which families
- Social exclusion state intrusion vs neglect
- Stigma
- Happy families key ingredients??
- Parenting
- Enduring x gen vs prevention
- DV
18Dual diagnosis?
- Mental Illness Substance Abuse
- Mental Illness Domestic Violence
- MI in parent AND child
- MISA in BOTH parents
- Axis I AND II (psychosis PD)
- Depression/anxiety, alcohol abuse PD
19Ingredients of Complexity
- Quadruple diagnosis
- Diagnostic uncertainty
- Too much, too little, poor quality info
difficulties across multiple domains - 1 person, multiple difficulties
- 1 or more difficulties in gt 1 person,
concurrently, at different times - Early adversity, resilience susceptibility
- Staff education, training experience
- Multiple services agencies
20Must v Should Policies, frameworks,
strategies and guidelines
- While there is no general legal impediment to
using the directive (ie must) rather than the
suggestive (ie should) in the Policy, 2 factors
should be kept in mind - Is it necessary to mandate (ie use the word
must) that all employees in all circumstances
behave in an exact manner and - As a breach of the Policy may result in a breach
of the code of conduct , the use of the
directive should be limited to circumstances
where an employees compliance with the Policy is
not dependent on factors outside the employees
control - Should an action that should be followed unless
there are sound reasons for taking a different
course of action
21Resources caught between service science
imperatives
- Much increased awareness successes in carer
consumer involvement, dev of materials for
families professionals - No clearly articulated, well evaluated models
(Bendigo grp Fraser et al review of intervention
programmes targeting ch wellbeing 26/520 papers
only 7 methodologically strong). See SCIE review - Need evidence to argue for resources
- Need resources to generate evidence
22From Thinking to Doing Implementation
- Most things out there are designed to stop you
making a difference. All the biggest bets in life
are on the status quo. Plenty of people think
they would like to change things but lack the
energy or the imagination to clamber over, or
beat a path through, the status quo only the few
determined and inspired ones will make a real
difference. - Paul Keating the power of the status quo -
Occasional address UNSW, 15 April 2003
23How Will We Know? Evaluation
- 'Here is Edward Bear, coming downstairs now bump,
bump, bump, on the back of his head, behind
Christopher Robin. - It is, as far as he knows, the only way of coming
downstairs, but sometimes he feels that there
really is another way, if only he could stop
bumping for a moment and think of it. - And then he feels that perhaps there isn't'
- A. A. Milne, Winnie the Pooh
24Competing needs
- Interplay between multiple psychosocial
vulnerabilities socioeconomic disadvantage over
the lifespan and across generations - Dual diagnosis is the norm for State-funded,
public sector services
25Strategies, tactics and approaches
- SCIE Guidelines comprehensive approaches
- Conceptual frameworks learning materials
- Identification, assessment intervention
- Family intervention
- Parenting is a mental health issue
- Working better together
- Evaluation
- Political will, advocacy and tragedy (policies,
resources and leadership) - Stigma
26SCIE Guidelines Comprehensive approaches
- Systematic service level identification
recording of children, parents, families - Appropriately tailored assm of need by relevant
sectors of a competent, confident visible
workforce - Capacity (skills, resources) to support
intervene according to assessed need utilising
evidence based interventions, early quickly - Evaluation research (tailored specific
modifications of existing interventions
approaches)
27Conceptual Models
- Continuum of need
- Family Model Crossing Bridges
- Family Focussed Assessment
28Crossing Bridges Key Principles
- The MH wellbeing of children adults within
families in which an adult carer is mentally ill,
are intimately linked in at least 4 ways - PMI can adversely affect the development and in
some cases the safety of children - Growing up with a MIP can have a negative
influence on the quality of that persons
adjustment in adulthood, including their
transition to parenthood - Children, particularly those with emotional,
behavioural or chronic physical difficulties, can
precipitate or exacerbate mental ill health in
their parents/carers - Adverse circumstances (pov, single p, social
isoln, stigma) can negatively influence both
child parental MH
29Crossing BridgesThe Family Model
4 Stressors vulnerabilities
1 Adult mental health
2 Child dev mental health
3 Parental fam relationships
4 Strengths, resilience resources
30IdentificationEvery Family in the Land?
- Epidemiological studies highlight widespread
prevalence and complex interplay between MISA,
childcare burden and social adversity - Given the number of MISA adults of child bearing
and rearing age there are substantial public
health implics for better detection, intervention
and prevention - Surveys highlight relevance of considering
childcare and protection issues amongst MISA
services and dev of MISA perspective amongst all
childrens services
31Assessment Key Areas
- Who to assess
- The child
- The ill parent
- Partners other key people in the childs life
- What to assess key domains
- Parenting
- MI /or SA in parent (MS risk harm to
self/other diagnosis Rx Prognosis
service/need match availability of resources
broader social needs) - Safety, wellbeing health of children
- How to assess
- Talking with children whose parents are MI or
abusing substances - Talking with parents / carers who are / may be MI
32FaMHliSTalking Together
- Child psychiatrist
- Do you worry you might upset your children if
you talk to them about your difficulties? - Adult psychiatrist
- Do you worry you might upset yourself?
33Family intervention
- Early (age eg children)
- Quickly (stage of illness)
- Identify, assess, intervene, review
- Family as key target for early intervention
- ve impact on children reduces burden for parents
- ve impact on parents promotes children's
wellbeing and safety
34Heide Lloyd, Mother of Hannah Georgina
- I did not realise how depressed I was at the
time now looking back I feel quite shocked to
think that I coped with a new baby a toddler,
having just given birth, believing that I could
be living in a world where I thought I could hear
even see people who were not there. This
eventually subsided over about 5 months, though I
had felt unable to share the experience with
anyone, sensing disbelief feeling really afraid
that I would be locked up my children taken
away
35Parenting is a Mental Health Issue
- Pivotal role in attachment, development
positive mental health - Mediator of good experiences, a buffer vs
adversity NB determinant of successful
transition to parenthood - A potent source of adversity poor quality
relationships - Direct effects of abuse neglect
- Absence of sufficient protection against life
events losses - Early trauma later susceptibility to MISA
poor adjustment - Mechanism for transmission of adversity
36Working Better Togetherprofessional perspectives
- I was scared. Thats the simple truth of it.
Scared. Terrified. She (mother) was in the corner
but he (father) was standing up. Shouting. I
could see his veins pulsing. Like he was going to
explode. He didnt want to come into hospital.
Said his wife couldnt manage the children. He
was usually so calm I was shocked at the change.
It took a long time to get over that. Oh of
course I did all the usual stuff trying to be
calm, talking him down, pressing the security
alarm. But I was still not prepared when it
happened. Took me a long time to get over it
37Working better together
- Thinking family when talking with individuals
- Supporting adults whilst ensuring the wellbeing
safety of children - Better identification and recording of vulnerable
children, assessment of their needs and
interventn according to assessed need - Improving childrens parents understanding of
and communication about MI ( SA) - Identifying strengths
38Working better together
- Integration of research into practice
- Making prevention / EI part of mainstream
practice - Availability of learning opportunities
- Workforce enhancements
- Local integration of teams and services
- Cross agency partnerships protocols
- Tackling stigma
- Resources best use of and credible argument for
additional
39Evaluation
- Of what?
- Family Children MIP Partner
- Services frontline staff managers teams
services agencies - Intervention treatment, protection, support,
prevention, protocols - Implementation actions targets / benchmarks /
standards - Workforce knowledge attitude skill recruitment
retention - Involve family members - how will we know
outcomes are improving - Generate good arguments for resources and
investment
40Tackling Stigma Discrimination
- The subject first caught my attention twenty
years ago when I came across a table of
charitable giving showing cancer close to the top
and mental health near the bottom. I wondered why
care of the mind should rank so much lower than
care of the body. The position is the same today.
The cancer charities are followed closely by the
animal charities. We give more to dogs than to
those with mental problems. - Jeremy Laurance
- How fear drives the mental health system.
41Childrens understanding of parental psychiatric
disorder Improving outcomes for families
- How can children understand what parents cant
explain?
42Sam, Aged 10, about his Fathers Schizophrenia
- Schizophrenia problems are to do with your
health, your head, stress and laziness and anger.
Depression is when you feel lonely like nobody
cares. - When I was very young Dad was saying in 100 years
the world will destroy itself. There will be
mayhem and death and things like that. I think
that I was about five. It made me very worried.
43Childrens Understanding
- During a meeting with his family, Jumai, a 7 yr
old described a conversation with his father - We were talking about her and dad said about the
controller - you know, for the TV. If you press
all the buttons all the time very quickly and it
jumps about all over - going crazy - thats like
what was happening in Mums head. She was in
hospital.
44Crossing Bridges Prevention
- Reduce child exposure to parental symptoms
- Assertively treat parental illness
- Promote positive parenting
- Reduce exposure to parental discord
- Educate parents about MISA
- Educate children about MISA ways of coping
- Promote open discussion about MISA in families
- Facilitate support outside the home
- Promote opportunities for relationships
achievements within school - Address socio-economic factors
45Conclusions
- Not possible to separate protection of children
from wider support to families, especially when
MI /or Substance misuse present - Support for children families cannot be
achieved by a single agency alone - Children are vulnerable unsafe if staff in
different agencies do not fulfill their separate
distinctive responsibilities - Combination of service structures that support
staff together with awareness, knowledge skills - Effective management leadership
46Conclusions
- Improve identification, assessment and
intervention - A broader, inclusive approach MH social care,
Child adult (parent), CP Family support - A lifespan and cross-generational perspective
- Working together and crossing bridges
- Talking with children and parents (family
approaches)
47Conclusions
- Provide targeted training ongoing education
- Develop service level partnerships within
between agencies - Prevention early intervention - children's
services as an explicit preventive component of
adult services?
48Conclusions
- Use Media opportunities
- Promote positive mental health tackle stigma
- Use evidence on prevalence of parenthood impact
on children to - make best use of existing resources
- argue coherently for additional investment
- improve clinical practice (assessment of need
early intervention) - Dev evidence base - models of good practice