“…Analogous to supported employment, supported parenting initiatives should aim to provide mothers diagnosed with SMI with a range of instrumental, emotional, and social assistance so that they may fulfill their parenting responsibilities to their fullest potential (see also Nicholson, Albert, Gershenson, Williams, & Biebel, 2009). Unlike supported employment, in which the beneficial impact of employment falls primarily to the employed individual, though, supported parenting affects, at minimum, two people (and possibly more) because these interventions target a parent’s ability to care for her dependent child (or children).…”