Abstract

Previous research suggests that serious maternal mental illness is associated with adverse youth outcomes. However, this research is of limited ability to inform appropriate social work and social policy responses for at least two reasons. First, it is based on samples that are not racially or ethnically diverse and that do not target low‐income families; second, it does not examine whether differences in the level of father involvement or the severity of maternal mental illness matter. This study involves a low‐income, racially and ethnically diverse sample of mothers with a serious mental illness and their 11–18‐year‐old children and examines parent effects on youths. Fathers were in contact but mostly were not live‐in parents. Structural equation modeling yields three key results: better maternal functioning and more paternal involvement predict better academic outcomes; less paternal involvement and more maternal health problems predict higher youth‐reported affiliative skills; and more paternal invol...

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