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Psychological Growth in Carers of People with Mental Illness . Name: Zafiroula (Zefi) Vlahodimitrakou Supervisors: Dr Elizabeth Temple and Professor Anthony Love Research completion: June , 2012 . “That which does not kill us makes us stronger.” (Nietzche, 1888) .
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Psychological Growth in Carers of People with Mental Illness Name: Zafiroula (Zefi) Vlahodimitrakou Supervisors: Dr Elizabeth Temple and Professor Anthony Love Research completion: June , 2012
“That which does not kill us makes us stronger.” (Nietzche, 1888)
Mental illness and carers • Reduction in in-patient care for mental illness & and shift in focus to the community • People experiencing acute episodes of mental illness are being treated at home • 15 % of Australians are carers (Pirkis et al., 2011) • Best Practice= families are included (Hughes, 2009)
The caring role 1 Carer defined Mental health carer- someone who provides informal practical and emotional support to someone with a mental health issue including relatives, friends or neighbours (Clements, 1996) The contribution of carers • 104 hpw (average) caring • Hold Australia’s mental health system together (Hughes, 2009).
The caring role 2 Difficulties often accompanying the caring role: • Trauma • Burden • Lowest collective wellbeing • Reduced physical, mental and emotional health • High depression rates • 20.6% carers are unemployed • Economic losses/hardship & financial security compromised • Higher levels of ill-health • Social isolation • Decreased life opportunities • Stigma • Difficulty accessing support services (Cummins et al., 2007)
The caring role 3 • ‘Silver lining effect’ • The Cognitive Model of Caregiving: carer appraisals -> positive and or negative cognitive and affective changes -> outcomes affective wellbeing of self and care recipient (Kuipers, Onwumere, & Bebbington, 2011) • BENEFITS: • Growth, self-empowerment & advocacy (Muhlbauer, 2002) • Pride & learning inner strengths (Johansson, Carlson, Ahlin, & Anderson, 2010) • Increased resiliency (Mays & Lund, 1999) • Positive changes in relationships with care recipient (Perkins et al., 2004)
Posttraumatic Growth (PTG)/ Psychological Growth • PTG is the experience of positive psychological changes that occur in the way of a traumatic event as a result of the subsequent struggle with what happened (Tedeschi & Calhoun, 2004) • Both a process and an outcome • Can emerge both in the absence and presence of posttraumatic stress • Occurs as the result of any experience perceived as traumatic • It is not appropriate to use the term “PTG” to label changes that may occur in cares of people with mental illness because often there is no “post” for this population • The term “psychological growth” is appropriate
Adapted from “Handbook of Posttraumatic Growth”, by L. G. Calhoun., and R. G. Tedeschi, 2006, p. 8.
Conceptualising positive carer outcomes: Psychological growth • Caring.....Traumatic? • Traumatic event: circumstances where there is a violation of relatively resistant cognitive core assumptions held by an individual about the world and the self (Janoff-Bulman, 2006) • Chronic sorrow (Roods, 2002) • Barton and Jackson (2005) found that 1/3 of carers (n = 37) of people with early psychosis met criteria for PTSD
Rationale for research on positive psychological growth in carers • For clinicians: - Assist with the assessment and treatment of carer complex emotions-Information about factors sustaining caregiving - Detection of crucial aspects of effective intervention • For carers: • Inclusion of + and - aspects of caregiving experiences into life narrative may be beneficial • By identifying areas of satisfaction in growth, carers may focus less on the negative aspects of providing care, feel a greater sense of accomplishment, and express more positive feelings about their relationship with the person they care for .........?????????
Aims • Broad aim: • To identify positive changes in the psychological growth of carers as a result of their caregiving journey. • Specific aim: • To examine the relationship between psychological growth and situational meaning, active and passive coping and informal and formal social support.
Research Variables • Situational meaning: meaning found in caregiving • Active coping: problem-focused and active emotion-focused coping • Passive coping: emotion-focused avoidant coping • Informal social support: practical, emotional and material assistance people can access from personal network (Machielse, 2006)
Method 1 • Participants: • N= 33 female, 12 male, M age = 41.5 years • Recruited- Mind Australia, snowballing & social media • Inclusion criteria- carer, aged 18+ & proficient in reading and writing in English • Materials: • Demographics questionnaire • Posttraumatic Growth Inventory • Finding Meaning through caregiving Scale • Brief COPE • Multidimensional Scale of Perceived Social Support • Procedure: • Questionnaire- hard-copy, online survey (20-35 min approximate duration)
Findings • Moderately high levels of psychological growth • Strong +relationship between situational meaning & psychological growth • Greater active coping greater situational meaning higher psychological growth • No significant relationship between passive coping and psychological growth • Greater access to informal social support greater situational meaning higher psychological growth
Implications • Holistic representation of carer’s experiences • Signal for researchers indicating under-investigated area • The promotion of positive adjustment to caregiving • Counterbalance tendency to view caregiving in largely negative terms • Reinforce eudaimonic mental health perspective
Questions……………………………………Thank you for your time!!!