2016
DOI: 10.1111/inm.12290
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‘Canaries in the mine’. Parents of adult children with schizophrenia: An integrative review of the literature

Abstract: The purpose of this integrative review was to evaluate the current state of knowledge of parents who have adult children diagnosed with schizophrenia and their relationship with mental health professionals. Findings indicated that parents (primarily mothers) believed they intuitively knew when their adult children were becoming unwell and that they doggedly pursued connections with mental health care providers. Five themes were evident in the literature. These were:trusting your instincts; feeling dismissed an… Show more

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Cited by 4 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…Generally, attitudes of health practitioners have been identified as the major barrier to consumer and carers' participation and overall improvement of health (Badu et al 2018; Klages et al 2017; WHO, 2017). Negative attitudes such as discrimination, frustration, and lack of respect can result in poor health outcomes for consumers (Goodwin & Happell 2007; Klages et al 2017). However, the review findings suggest that MHPs in both intervention and nonintervention groups had positive attitudes about the concept of recovery.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Generally, attitudes of health practitioners have been identified as the major barrier to consumer and carers' participation and overall improvement of health (Badu et al 2018; Klages et al 2017; WHO, 2017). Negative attitudes such as discrimination, frustration, and lack of respect can result in poor health outcomes for consumers (Goodwin & Happell 2007; Klages et al 2017). However, the review findings suggest that MHPs in both intervention and nonintervention groups had positive attitudes about the concept of recovery.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Parents occupy an important role in caring for a mentally-ill child and in fulfilling tasks that parents of children without such conditions are not confronted with, such as initiating and supporting the child's professional help-seeking (Logan and King, 2001; Sayal, 2006) or providing elevated and continuous levels of informal care (Chan, 2011). Furthermore, parents might experience negative emotions, such as worries and anxiety about whether someone else will assume the caregiving role for their child if they were no longer capable or around to do so (Corcoran et al ., 2015; Klages et al ., 2016).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%