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Families Coping with Mental Illness: Stories from the US and Japan



This excerpt from the book "Families Coping with Mental Illness: Stories from the US and Japan" discusses how families cope with mental illness. The author discusses how there are similarities between American and Japanese families in how they cope with mental illness. more details
Key Features:
  • Both Japanese and American families cope with mental illness in different ways.
  • Both Japanese and American families have to deal with the stigma attached to mental illness.
  • Both Japanese and American families have to come to terms with their own emotions and feelings.


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Features
Author Yuko Kawanishi
ISBN 9780415952019
Publisher Routledge
Manufacturer Routledge
Description
This excerpt from the book "Families Coping with Mental Illness: Stories from the US and Japan" discusses how families cope with mental illness. The author discusses how there are similarities between American and Japanese families in how they cope with mental illness.

When a loved one, family member, spouse, or close friend develops a mental illness, the profound changes to the afflicted person resonate through the family with unique and life-altering consequences, often with as great an impact on them as on the person suffering with the illness. Family members have to adapt and make changes to lifestyles and future plans, and often face depression, stress, and other secondary issues, as they learn to cope with a new situation. And today, despite immense medical and political progress and open debate on mental disorders, attention is still overwhelmingly focused on the treatment of the patient, while family members are relegated to adjunctive roles in treatment, and sometimes even viewed as barriers to effective therapy and recovery. Seemingly in contradiction with the interpersonal nature of most mental disorders (not to mention the social stigma that affects the family as well as the individual), a patient-centered approach to treatment remains the most common perspective. This book approaches these issues from the perspective of the family members, giving a voice to the experiences of families coping with such a profound change to one of their own. It looks at how families initially react to a diagnosis, how they struggle through shock, anger, and trauma, adapt to new circumstances, and cope with their situation. This unique volume draws from the author's own original research and her work with families in the United States and Japan, and presents a cross-cultural comparison of families' experiences in both countries. Written with a focus on the sociological, as well as psychological, aspects of these experiences, the book features first-hand accounts from family members, complementing the author's analysis and discussion. While there are of course variations in the experiences of American and Japanese families, the author ultimately finds that there is considerably more in common. Thus the book presents a series of potentially universal themes of human resilience, ability to adapt and cope with significant trauma and tragedy to the family, and the strength of the family unit.
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