Rose Linda, Mallinson R Kevin, Walton-Moss Benita
Johns Hopkins University School of Nursing, Baltimore, MD, USA.
West J Nurs Res. 2002 Aug;24(5):516-36. doi: 10.1177/019394590202400505.
Despite decades of research documenting family burden related to mental illness of a relative, little is known about families' responses over time. A grounded theory study was designed to describe families' responses to these severe mental illnesses. Twenty-nine participants representing 17 families were interviewed 3 times over 2 years. Interviews were analyzed using constant comparison. Living with ambiguity of mental illness was the central concern. The basic social process was pursuing normalcy and included confronting the ambiguity of mental illness, seeking to control impact of the illness, and seeing possibilities for the future. Goals were managing crises, containing and controlling symptoms, and crafting a notion of "normal." Strategies were being vigilant, setting limits on patients, invoking logic, dealing with sense of loss, seeing patients' strengths, and taking on roles. The study revealed that families were profoundly affected by the social contexts of mental illnesses.
尽管数十年来的研究记录了与亲属精神疾病相关的家庭负担,但对于家庭随时间推移的反应却知之甚少。一项扎根理论研究旨在描述家庭对这些严重精神疾病的反应。代表17个家庭的29名参与者在两年内接受了3次访谈。采用持续比较法对访谈进行分析。与精神疾病的不确定性共存是核心关注点。基本的社会过程是追求常态,包括面对精神疾病的不确定性、试图控制疾病的影响以及展望未来的可能性。目标是管理危机、控制症状并塑造一种“正常”的观念。策略包括保持警惕、对患者设定限制、运用逻辑、应对失落感、看到患者的优势以及承担各种角色。该研究表明,家庭受到精神疾病社会环境的深刻影响。