Abstract
This article summarises current knowledge about two aspects of family care for people with mental illness: potentially pressurising or coercive aspects of family life; and family carers’ experiences of being involved in coercive service interventions. There is a paucity of studies on these topics, especially outside Europe, North America and Australasia, and further research is recommended.
Caregiving within families forms part of normative cultural expectations everywhere. In many parts of the world, where health systems are non-existent or limited, family members may be the sole source of help for people with mental illness. Where services do exist, family members are often involved in delivery. Their role is increasingly written into mental health policy and law, which often specify a role for caregivers in compulsory treatment (Rugkåsa, 2016). While there are some studies reporting family caregivers’ experiences of involvement in compulsion, there is almost a complete lack of research investigating how they exert influence when helping a relative with medication, finance, housing and other issues. There is a dearth of published research on caregiving, pressure and coercion from outside Europe, North America and Australasia (Rugkåsa, 2016).
In this article we summarise current knowledge about two aspects to family caregiving and pressure on people with mental illness. First, we highlight some potentially pressurising or coercive aspects of family life. Second, we summarise studies of family caregivers’ experiences of involvement in coercive treatment of their relative. Although our focus is on pressure and coercion, it is important to note that this is but one dimension to the irreplaceable contribution most family caregivers make (often to their own detriment) and which is motivated by love, identity and compassion, as well as frustrations, sadness and fear, and a deep desire to help their relative to recover.
Potentially pressurising aspects of family care
Caregivers’ support of their unwell relative has the potential to influence or coerce, or to be perceived as such, regardless of their intention. For example, caregivers may try hard to get reluctant patients to engage in social interactions or activities that the caregiver believes will improve their general wellbeing (Villatoro & Aneshensel, 2014). Caregivers may sometimes consider it necessary to take control over matters often considered to be private, such as finances and medication.
Caregivers’ interactions with their unwell relative are shaped by their cultural models for what mental illness is and how it should be treated, and for the obligations family members have to support one another. For example, how one deals with the universal stigmatisation of mental illness varies. Stigma may have implications for both the patient’s and the entire family’s employment opportunities, status, honour or marriage prospects (Shefer et al, 2013). As protection, some families may conceal the illness or hide away the unwell relative (Shefer et al, 2013). This may delay presentation to services (Villatoro & Aneshensel, 2014).
Other sociocultural factors also influence help-seeking. Those who perceive mental illness as resulting from witchcraft, spirit possession or misconduct by the person with the condition (or even the misconduct of a relative of an earlier generation) may seek supernatural solutions, sometimes with the support of mental health professionals. Those with a strong belief in pharmaceutical solutions may encourage patients to seek psychiatric help. Often, people alternate between traditional and biomedical services, and family pressure can lead a relative with mental illness either towards or away from particular treatment approaches (Villatoro & Aneshensel, 2014).
Coercion by family caregivers
People with acute mental illness may reject support, neglect themselves, damage relationships, mismanage their finances, or endanger the health and safety of either themselves or others. To prevent these harmful outcomes, family caregivers may try to apply different forms of control. A range of techniques to ensure their relative takes medication are described in the literature, from collecting medication and reminding their relative to take it, to bringing them to clinics or administering pills directly. Surreptitious administration of medication (e.g. in food or drink) by caregivers has also been reported (Hallam, 2007) and is even supervised by psychiatrists in some places (Shah & Basu, 2010). Also, caregivers may make implicit or explicit threats to contact the police or the hospital in order to make patients adhere to treatment, especially when acutely ill.
There are reports of people with mental illness being restrained or confined in the family home either by shackles or by being locked into a room or specially designed hut, sometimes for years. Much attention is given to the practice of pasung in Indonesia but similar practices exist elsewhere (Guan et al, 2015). Usually described as a measure of desperation due to poverty or a lack of services, there is a paucity of studies exploring such practices from the viewpoint of family caregivers themselves. One ethnographic study from Indonesia demonstrates the complexity of these practices (Tyas, 2010). Family members describe pasung as resulting from psychiatric services being geographically or financially inaccessible, or as the treatment recommended to them by elders or religious faith healers. It is also a means of protecting patients against abuse on psychiatric wards, or against violence, stigma or humiliation in the community. While sometimes seen as the only option by caregivers, it causes some of them to feel guilt, regret and sadness. Local services seem well aware of the practice and some patients are visited regularly by community nurses.
Caregiver involvement in coercive service delivery
The ways in which family members are involved in mental health services vary. In many places, professionals are explicitly encouraged to view families as integral to healthcare systems. This can work well, sometimes creating real partnerships. In systems where medical records are not in regular use, for example, psychiatrists often depend on the family to obtain information, which can give relatives extensive influence on clinical decision-making (Nunley, 1988).
A fairly substantial literature demonstrates difficulties in achieving proper caregiver involvement, however (Eassom et al, 2014). Caregivers’ expertise is often reported as going unrecognised despite their intimate knowledge of a patient’s circumstances and changing needs (Jankovic et al, 2011). A great deal of conflict emerges from patients’ rights to confidentiality, on the one hand, and caregivers’ wishes to be involved and to help, on the other. Some have suggested that if services found ways around issues of confidentiality, caregivers’ involvement could reduce the need for coercive treatment (Nurjannah et al, 2014).
In-patient coercion
The Western concern with patient confidentiality is not necessarily shared by other traditions (Shah & Basu, 2010). In many parts of India, for example, it is required that a family member resides with a hospitalised patient to ensure the patient remains in hospital, to cook for them, to assist with personal hygiene and to provide clinicians with information, and this role takes precedence over issues of patient confidentiality (Nunley, 1988).
Most mental health laws have provision for family members to apply for legal compulsion. Initiating involuntary hospitalisation is usually described by caregivers as a last resort, and as humiliating and painful for everyone. Their involvement with legal coercion can sometimes place them in adversarial positions vis-à-vis the patient, which can make some caregivers reluctant to seek help. Even so, hospitalisation can represent an essential ‘safety net’ or respite (Hallam, 2007) for caregivers during crises.
Coercive community interventions
Family caregivers are often closely involved in out-patient care, frequently ensuring that patients adhere to medication. In general, they seem to welcome community-based services with assertive delivery models or formal out-patient compulsion in the form of community treatment orders (CTOs) if this means improved care. Many caregivers hope that a CTO can prevent their relative from fully relapsing before services intervene (Ridley et al, 2010). Also, the authority of mental health professionals or the law can remove some of the risk of damage to relationships which can exist when caregivers monitor medication and finances.
Caregivers’ experiences of CTOs are mixed, however. For some, CTOs have led to increased involvement and influence over decisions (Hallam, 2007) and better patient care (Ridley et al, 2010), but others report a lack of consultation and involvement (Canvin et al, 2014). Some say demands on beds mean that patients can be discharged onto CTOs prematurely with an expectation that relatives are ready and able to look after them (Hallam, 2007). Some caregivers are concerned that CTOs are too narrowly focused on medication and fail to help people to live better lives and to recover (Canvin et al, 2014).
Conclusions
That family members try to influence each other is not surprising: it is a universal feature of family life. However, caring for a relative with severe mental illness, who is difficult to control or whose treatment is enforced by law, may transform the nature or meaning of family dynamics. Interpretations of mental illness and its cure are inevitably made in light of culturally available explanations and occur in contexts of variable access to psychiatric services and financial resources. Regardless of intentions, some caregivers’ approaches may be pressurising or coercive, and can amount to deprivation of liberty.
Family caregivers may also cooperate with coercive services (although they sometimes oppose them). While many feel excluded from decision-making, caregivers generally value the opportunity to be involved and generally want more influence. Improved carer involvement may reduce the use of coercion, but it is important to note that some family carers prefer to have less care responsibility for their relative. Some judge, however, that the absence or inadequacy of services makes it unsafe for them to take a step back.
Current evidence regarding the role of family carers in the coercion of people with mental illness is scarce, and the scope and quality of studies vary greatly. We particularly need further research from countries where formal health services or mental health legislation are lacking or in development in order to facilitate comparative studies of this complex and important issue.
Conflicts of interest. None.
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