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The present study compares 94 young adults' self-reported felt obligation toward parents, psychological symptoms, psychological well-being, and interpersonal loneliness in three family types: families where a mother has serious mental illness, families where a father has serious mental illness, and families with nondistressed parents. Results indicated no significant differences in felt obligation toward mothers or fathers as a function of family type. Young adults with a mother with serious mental illness reported significantly more psychological adjustment difficulties than their peers with a father with serious mental illness or nondistressed parents. Young adults' reports of felt obligation toward both parents were significantly positively correlated with young adults' psychological adjustment in families with a parent with serious mental illness, but were not significantly correlated in families with nondistressed parents. Study limitations, future directions for research, and implications for clinical practice are discussed.
Abraham et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
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