This lecture examines the impact of parental mental illness on children. There are 175,000 young carers of parents with mental illness in the UK but maybe as many as 1,000,000 children affected by an adult's mental illness. They worry about their parents and perhaps they blame themselves, or fear that they will also "catch" it. They often fall through the professional net, are seen as nobody's responsibility and receive no help. Film illustrations are given of very small interventions which can help protect children from the negative effects.
Dr. Alan Cooklin is a family psychiatrist. He is consultant to the Family Project for Major Mental Illness for Camden and Islington NHS Foundation Trust and honorary Senior Lecturer at University College London. He was consultant in charge of Paediatric Liaison Services for UCL Hospitals.
Study of the psychological processes of children. The field is sometimes subsumed under developmental psychology. Data are gathered through observation, interviews, tests, and experimental methods. Principal topics include language acquisition and development, motor skills, personality development, and social, emotional, and intellectual growth. The field began to emerge in the late 19th century through the work of German psychophysiologist William Preyer, American psychologist G. Stanley Hall, and others. In the 20th century the psychoanalysts Anna Freud and Melanie Klein devoted themselves to child psychology, but its most influential figure was Jean Piaget, who described the various stages of childhood learning and characterized children's perceptions of themselves and the world at each stage. See alsoschool psychology.
Thank you for this presentation and thank for sharing those info with us. Congrats to Alan Cooklin for the very interesting way he is dealing with these matters. I can only wish him to continue to do his great work.