| Literature DB >> 18722152 |
Sarah Curtis1, W Gesler, Stefan Priebe, Susan Francis.
Abstract
This paper examines the implications for design of inpatient settings of community-based models of care and treatment of mental illness. The study draws on ideas from relational geographies and expands interpretations based on Foucault's writing. We analyse material from a case study which explored the views of patients, consultants, and other staff from a new Psychiatric Inpatient Unit in a deprived area of East London, UK. We discuss in particular: the tension between providing a caring and supportive institutional environment and ensuring that patients are returned to the community when they are ready; the links between an acute inpatient facility and its local community; the potential significance of the psychiatric hospital as a relatively stable feature in the otherwise insecure and unpredictable geographical experience of people with long-term mental illnesses. We discuss the relevance of these issues for design of new psychiatric inpatient facilities.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2008 PMID: 18722152 DOI: 10.1016/j.healthplace.2008.06.007
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Place ISSN: 1353-8292 Impact factor: 4.078