| Literature DB >> 18844798 |
A Skorpen1, N Anderssen, C Oeye, A K Bjelland.
Abstract
This article investigates the significance of the smoking-room for psychiatric patients: for their everyday interactions, activities and perceptions of what is meaningful, also for their positioning as agents concerning their own and fellow patients' illnesses and problems. A social constructionist perspective is used as well as concepts anchored in a phenomenology of architecture and local place. This article is a part of ethnographic study of the daily life within a psychiatric ward using participant observation and conversations and interviews with psychiatric inpatient and staff in a psychiatric hospital. Important themes from our analysis were 'smoking-room as patients''panopticon', 'smoking-room as the patients' sanctuary' and 'patient-led treatment'. We discuss these themes within a framework of seeing the smoking-room as an arena for patient and staff resistance. Patients' resistance is analysed as attempts to maintain their civil status identity and feelings of dignity in an otherwise powerless situation.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2008 PMID: 18844798 DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2850.2008.01298.x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Psychiatr Ment Health Nurs ISSN: 1351-0126 Impact factor: 2.952