Building Children’s Resilience in the Face of Parental Mental Illness

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'good enough' parenting
Adverse Childhood Experience
Alan Cooklin
Bipolar Disorder
CAPRI
Category=JKSN2
child carer
childhood adversity
childhood trauma
Children's resilience
depression
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eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Face To Face
family breakdown
Family Friend
family systems approach
family therapy
Father's Illness
Father’s Illness
Follow
Hold
Ill Parent
interprofessional collaboration
Large Family
Mental Health
Mental Health Illness
Mental Health Problems
Mental Illness
Mother's Illness
Mother’s Illness
nuclear family
Parent's Illness
Parent's Mental Illness
Parental Mental
Parental Mental Ill Health
Parental mental illness
Parent’s Illness
Parent’s Mental Illness
psychosocial interventions
qualitative case studies
resilience
stigma reduction strategies
supporting children of mentally ill parents
UK Team
Wo
Workshops
Young Carer
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367183127
  • Weight: 380g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 29 Sep 2020
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Mental illness in a parent presents children with multiple challenges, including stigma, self-doubt and self-blame, ongoing anxiety and depression, that are rarely discussed in the public domain. This important new book, written by young people who have lived through these experiences, as well as professionals working alongside their families, highlights the relationships between children, parents and professionals, and the emotional issues they all face.

A key focus of the book is the relationships in all combinations between the children, parents and professionals, as well as the responses to each other illustrated throughout. It will be ideal for all those working in the health, social and educational professions, as well as parents and children themselves.

Alan Cooklin has worked as a family therapist, psychiatrist, and child and adolescent psychiatrist for some 45 years. For the past 20 years he has developed the multi-family Kidstime Workshops for the children of parents with mental illness and their families, and in 2012 established the charity (The Kidstime Foundation, later Our Time) to disseminate this approach. He has published widely.

Gill Gorell Barnes has been a family therapist, published researcher, and university lecturer for over 35 years, as well as working as expert witness in the family courts for 15 years. Her focus on children in families afflicted by parental mental illness and other sources of extreme behaviour includes all varieties of family life. She has published widely.