*School of Humanities and Social Sciences, Faculty of Arts, Charles Sturt University, Wagga Wagga 2650, Australia, email: dmaybery{at}csu.edu.au
School of Education, Charles Sturt University
School of Humanities and Social Sciences, Charles Sturt University
School of Humanities and Social Sciences, Charles Sturt University
LaTrobe University, Australia
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To provide multiple estimates of the numbers of Australian and Victorian families and children living in families where a parent has had a mental illness. We used the Australian Bureau of Statistics Victorian Mental Health Branch service usage and data collected from 701 community participants to triangulate prevalence information.
RESULTS
According to population estimates, 23.3% of all children in Australia have a parent with a non-substance mental illness, 20.4% of mental health service users have dependent children and 14.4% of the community study participants report having at least one parent with a mental illness.
CLINICAL IMPLICATIONS
The multiple prevalence estimates of the numbers of children in families with parental mental illness provide fundamental information for psychiatric policy, planning and programming.
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In Australia, several small-scale studies have made population estimates based on the proportion of service users with children undergoing treatment at a mental health facility (Hearle et al, 1999; Handley et al, 2001). The Australian Infant, Child, Adolescent and Family Mental Health Association (2001) summarised these estimates by suggesting that between 29 and 35% of adult mental health service users were women with children under the age of 18 years. This is a much lower estimate of parent status compared with that of Nicholson et als (2002), although it should be noted that the Australian studies were based on small numbers of in-patients. Once again the number of children with parents who have had mental illness was not mentioned in the estimate.
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Population estimate
The population estimate relied upon cross-calculations employing the ABS
Mental Health and Wellbeing: Profile of Adults, Australia (1997) and
the Family Characteristics Australia (2003a) reports. Both
studies involved multi-stage surveys conducted by the ABS that drew upon
Australian representative samples of private households, with age and gender
characteristics weighted to match the national census. The mental health
survey sampled 13 624 private households and had 10 641 respondents (78.1%
response rate). Volunteers responded to prevalence and severity of mental
disorder questions in the past 12 months. The Family Characteristics
report provided information on numbers of children and type of households in
Australia and Victoria in 2003 and was conducted as a supplement to the
monthly Australian labour force survey
(Australian Bureau of Statistics,
2003b) of approximately 30 000 (0.4%) of Australian
households. Sample data from both studies were extrapolated by the ABS using
Australian demographic statistics to estimate the mental health and family
characteristics of the entire Australian population.
Mental health service users in Victoria
The service usage of the 38 455 adults attending Victorian mental health
services during the 2003-2004 financial year included 91.4% of users aged
20-60 years with most (67%) between 20 and 44 years old; 48% were female; 22%
were hospitalised owing to their illness during this period.
Data from the community study
The third data-set was collected as part of a relatively large
(n=701) community study (a normative study for comparison purposes in
an evaluation of a programme for children in families with a parental mental
illness) (Maybery et al,
2006). The study targeted, through schools, both parents and their
8 to 12-year-old children from three Australian states. The parents
self-identified their mental health status by responding to a yes/no question:
Have you (or your partner) ever been diagnosed with a mental
illness? A great majority of parent respondents (90%) were female.
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View this table: [in a new window] |
Table 1. Australian and Victorian families and children living in families with
at least one parent who has had a mental illness
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The data from the Victorian Mental Health Branch indicate that 7829 (20.4%) of the total 38 455 mental health service users for the year 2003-2004 were living with dependent children (Table 1; data were not available for the total number of children with parents with a mental illness and so do not include children not living with the parent). This is also extrapolated to the whole Australian population estimate.
Of the 701 parent participants in the community study, 83 responded (11.8%) that they had had a mental illness. In addition, 26 (3%) of participants responded that their spouse had had a mental illness. In total, in 101 (14.4%) of the families surveyed, at least one parent had a mental illness and a number of children had two parents with a mental illness. Although we recognise that in at least some families both parents would have a mental illness, such calculations were outside the scope of this paper.
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Importantly, we focused on numbers of children and families rather than only parenthood. Perhaps more important is the illustration of numbers from three diverse perspectives including a large-scale population estimate, actual mental health facility usage and a general community sample. Together, these different sources provide valuable planning information for government policy and interventions, as well as important information to community agencies regarding the issue of parental mental illness. The data about families and children in our study challenge psychiatric service providers to acknowledge the large number of children and families in their prevention, early intervention and mental health treatment policies.
Interestingly, there is a large divergence in estimates of the number of children in families with parental mental illness in the general population (23.3%; 1 million Australian and 250 000 Victorian) (Australian Bureau of Statistics, 2003a) and in Victoria (1.3%; 60 000 estimated Australian and 14 403 Victorian) (Maybery et al, 2006). This can largely be explained by illness severity - all of the Victorian mental health service users could be considered to have a severely disabling mental illness compared with only 12.8% of those with a mental illness in Australia (the survey used multiple levels of illness disability; Australian Bureau of Statistics, 1997). Consequently, when illness severity is considered, the ABS estimate is much more comparable to the actual Victorian data. Together, these findings provide important information showing a broad picture estimate of all children in families with parental mental illness (i.e. 23.3% when not constrained by level of mental illness) and much smaller numbers (1.3%) where the illness is severe.
Unfortunately, although parental mental illness does not in itself guarantee poor outcomes for children, more severe parent disability has been associated with less sensitive and competent parenting (Rogosch et al, 1992), significantly greater mental illness in offspring (Warner et al, 1995), insecure infant attachment (Teti et al, 1995; Frankel & Harmon, 1996) and lower quality of the mother-child relationship (Harnish et al, 1995). The estimate of just under 60 000 children living with a parent with a severe mental illness in Australia is likely to be very accurate as the figures are extrapolated to the Australian context from the 14 403 children of Victorian parents with a severe mental illness. This suggests a large number of children likely to be at risk owing to their parents severe mental illness.
The third estimation of prevalence simply involved asking a general community sample of parents of children aged 8-12 years whether they or their partner had had a mental illness. The resulting prevalence of 14.4% was considerably lower than the 23.3% from the ABS study. The discrepancy might be partly explained by differences in survey methods (i.e. respondents replied to a single question regarding previous illness diagnosis, whereas the ABS used a diagnostic questionnaire to determine mental health status), but this still equates to 668 462 children and 163 267 families in Australia.
Limitations
Although our findings provide valuable information about children of
parents with a mental illness, there are several qualifiers. The ABS estimates
have limitations as they are simply extrapolations from previous Australian
mental health and family unit research. For example, it has been suggested
that people with mental illnesses have more children than those without an
illness (Nicholson et al,
2002), but other cross-calculations such as procreation
differences in families with one and two-parent illness are largely unknown.
In addition, the ABS 1997 and 2003 data-sets assume equivalence of population
characteristics (i.e. that family and mental health characteristics remain
consistent over time). Changes in such areas as migration patterns (e.g. fewer
refugees with post-traumatic stress disorder or more professional families)
may alter population characteristics and subsequent extrapolations using the
different years may be less accurate. Future prevalence estimates should aim
to use data from the same year. Alternatively, it is difficult to dispute the
actual mental health service usage data from the state of Victoria. However,
the third cross-sectional data source provided no information about age at
onset or level of disability and was a self-estimation rather than a diagnosis
by clinician interview. Furthermore, the data were obtained almost solely from
female participants. A large ABS study similar to the Mental Health and
Wellbeing Profile of Adults (1997) study, but focusing on family
structures, would rectify the deficits in the data.
Notwithstanding the methodological problems, the multiple estimation procedures provide rudimentary prevalence information from a number of perspectives. The multisource data provide direction and evidence to support future psychiatric policy and practitioner decision-making (e.g. development and referrals to programmes) for children from families with a parental mental illness. This provides basic evidence to governments and mental health support agencies of a large number of children, many of whom could be considered to be living in a high-risk family environment. Multiple factors concerning the parent, such as diagnosis, illness chronicity and severity, social isolation, level of family support and financial stress, will differentially have impact on children, and the considerable number of children in such families should make them a high-priority group for future psychiatric decision-making regarding intervention and policy.
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