| Literature DB >> 27381002 |
Polly Chester1, Carolyn Ehrlich1, Loretta Warburton1,2, David Baker1,2, Elizabeth Kendall1, David Crompton1,2.
Abstract
Concepts of personal and social recovery in mental illness are constantly evolving because the journey is fluid and subject to change over time. Dynamic interactions between the complexities of human nature and mental illness create ever-altering landscapes of perplexity. The acknowledged ebb and flow of recovery in the presence of chronic and serious mental illness requires health professionals to provide a flexible suite of care, delivered through skills and methods that are responsive and meaningful to the recipient. We conducted a systematic search for qualitative literature that articulated the work of personally-supportive recovery-oriented practice (ROP) to determine the specific components of recovery-supportive work. Twenty-one articles were identified as meeting the inclusion criteria and were synthesized using a coding framework derived from Normalization Process Theory. We identified three kinds of recovery-supportive work required from health professionals: alleviating stigma, delivering effective recovery-supportive responses in the presence of complex health and social situations and managing challenges associated with the work of ROP. We discuss the resources needed for ROP and the barriers that inhibit health professionals' engagement in this work. By elucidating the work of ROP, we highlighted a disparity between health professionals' aspirations and achievements. These revelations could inform service delivery in order to better support consumer recovery in serious mental illness.Entities:
Keywords: humans; mental health services/standards; normalization process theory; physician's role; professional-patient relations; recovery of function
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27381002 DOI: 10.1111/inm.12241
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Ment Health Nurs ISSN: 1445-8330 Impact factor: 3.503