Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10609/149282
Title: Family impact in intellectual disability, severe mental health disorders and mental health disorders in ID. A comparison
Author: Martorell, Almudena  
Gutiérrez Recacha, Pedro
Irazábal, Marcia
MARSA-SAMBOLA, FERRAN  
García, Mercedes
Citation: Martorell, A. [Almudena]. Gutiérrez-Recacha, P. [Pedro]. Irazábal, M. [Marcia]. Marsà, F. [Ferrán]. García, M. [Mercedes]. (2011). Family impact in intellectual disability, severe mental health disorders and mental health disorders in ID. A comparison, Research in Developmental Disabilities, Volume 32, Issue 6, Pages 2847-2852, ISSN 0891-4222, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ridd.2011.05.021.
Abstract: Family impact (or family burden) is a concept born in the field of mental health that has successfully been exported to the ambit of intellectual disability (ID). However, differences in family impact associated with severe mental health disorders (schizophrenia), to ID or to mental health problems in ID should be expected. Seventy-two adults with intellectual disability clients of the Carmen Pardo-Valcarce Foundation's sheltered workshops and vocational employment programmes in Madrid (Spain), 203 adults diagnosed with schizophrenia from four Spanish Community Mental Health Services (Barcelona, Madrid, Granada and Navarra) and 90 adults with mental health problems in ID (MH-ID) from the Parc Sanitari Sant Joan de Déu Health Care Site in Sant Boi de Llobregat, Barcelona (Spain) were asked to participate in the present study along with their main caregivers. Family impact experienced by caregivers was assessed with the ECFOS-II/SOFBI-II scale (Entrevista de Carga Familiar Objetiva y Subjetiva/Objective and Subjective Family Burden Interview). In global terms, results showed that the higher family impact was found between caregivers to people with MH-ID. The interaction of both conditions (ID and mental health problems) results in a higher degree of burden on families than when both conditions are presented separately. There was also an impact in caregivers to people with schizophrenia, this impact being higher than the one detected in caregivers to people with intellectual disability. Needs of caregivers to people with disability should be addressed specifically in order to effectively support families.
Keywords: intellectual disability
schizophrenia
mental health
family burden
families
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ridd.2011.05.021
Document type: info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Version: info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
Issue Date: Dec-2011
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