Epistemic injustice in experiences of young people with parents with mental health challenges

Author:

Yates Scott1ORCID,Gladstone Brenda2,Foster Kim3,Silvén Hagström Anneli4,Reupert Andrea5,O’Dea Lotti6,Cuff Rose6,McGaw Violette7,Hine Rochelle8

Affiliation:

1. School of Applied Social Sciences De Montfort University Leicester UK

2. Dalla Lana School of Public Health University of Toronto Toronto Ontario Canada

3. National School of Nursing, Midwifery & Paramedicine Australian Catholic University Fitzroy Victoria Australia

4. Department of Social Work Stockholm University Stockholm Sweden

5. School of Educational Psychology and Counselling Monash University Clayton Victoria Australia

6. Satellite Foundation Melbourne Victoria Australia

7. Trauma Recovery Program Toowong Private Hospital Brisbane Queensland Australia

8. Monash Rural Health Monash University Clayton Victoria Australia

Abstract

AbstractAmongst the impacts of growing up with a parent with mental health challenges is the experience of stigma‐by‐association, in which children and young people experience impacts of stigmatisation due to their parent’s devalued identity. This article seeks to expand our understanding of this issue through an abductive analysis of qualitative data collected through a codesign process with young people. Results indicate that young people’s experiences of stigmatisation can be effectively understood as experiences of epistemic injustice. Participants expressed that their experiences comprised ‘more than’ stigma, and their responses suggest the centrality to their experiences of being diminished and dismissed in respect of their capacity to provide accurate accounts of their experiences of marginalisation and distress. Importantly, this diminishment stems not only from their status as children, and as children of parents with mental health challenges but operates through a range of stigmatised identities and devalued statuses, including their own mental health status, sexual minoritisation, disability and social class. Forms of epistemic injustice thus play out across the social and institutional settings they engage with. The psychological and social impacts of this injustice are explored, and the implications for our understanding of stigma around family mental health discussed.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Health Policy,Health (social science)

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