A family perspective on parental psychosis: An interpretative phenomenological analysis study
Citation
Radley, J., Barlow, J., & Johns, L. C. (2022). A family perspective on parental psychosis: An interpretative phenomenological analysis study. Psychology and Psychotherapy: Theory, Research and Practice, 00, 1– 18. https://doi.org/10.1111/papt.12443
Abstract
Objectives: While one third of people with a psychotic
disorder are a parent, there has been little research to date
examining the consequences of this from a whole family
perspective. This study investigates families where a parent
has experienced an episode of psychosis and compares and
contrasts the family members' perspectives.
Design: This study was rooted in phenomenology and data
were derived from in-depth semi-structured interviews.
Methods: Parents with a psychotic disorder who had a child
aged between 3 and 11 in a UK NHS Trust were invited to take
part in the study. Semi-structured interviews were conducted
with these parents, with their child (if they were between the
ages of 8 and 11), and with their partner or another close
family member. Data were analysed using multiperspectival
interpretive phenomenological analysis (m-IPA).
Results: Thirteen participants took part comprising of five
parents, four children, three partners and one grandmother.
Four themes were developed using m-IPA: (1) Parental
psychosis impacts the whole family, (2) Psychosis and my role
as a parent, (3) Secrecy and concealment surrounding parental psychosis, and (4) Pressures and vulnerabilities within the
family system.
Conclusion: Psychosis had a negative impact on all family
members and secrecy existed between family members. The
children in particular only had partial information about
their parent's mental illness, which left them worried and
confused. More work is needed to support these families to
explain psychosis to the children.
Description
Open Access CC