| Literature DB >> 31588912 |
Rose McGranahan1, Stefan Rennick-Egglestone2, Amy Ramsay3, Joy Llewellyn-Beardsley2, Simon Bradstreet4, Felicity Callard5, Stefan Priebe1, Mike Slade2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Mental health recovery narratives are first-person lived experience accounts of recovery from mental health problems, which refer to events or actions over a period. They are readily available either individually or in collections of recovery narratives published in books, health service booklets, or on the Web. Collections of recovery narratives have been used in a range of mental health interventions, and organizations or individuals who curate collections can therefore influence how mental health problems are seen and understood. No systematic review has been conducted of research into curatorial decision making.Entities:
Keywords: culturally appropriate technology; mental health recovery; narrative medicine
Year: 2019 PMID: 31588912 PMCID: PMC6915799 DOI: 10.2196/14233
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JMIR Ment Health ISSN: 2368-7959
Figure 1Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) flow diagram for documents included in qualitative synthesis.
Summary of documents subject to inductive thematic analysis.
| UIDa | Reference | Categorization | Collection(s) referred to | Country of collection | Narrative format |
| 1 | Crossley and Crossley [ | Journal article | Two books: The Plea for the Silent [ | England | Text |
| 2 | Health Talk [ | Description of curation | HealthTalk: Web-based collection of health narratives | England | Audio, text, and video |
| 3 | Bradstreet [ | Description of curation | Multiple collections of mental health recovery narratives curated by the Scottish Recovery Network | Scotland | Audio, text, and video |
| 4 | Write to Recovery [ | Description of curation | The “Write to Recovery” Web-based recovery narrative collection | Scotland | Text |
| 5 | Time to Change [ | Guidelines for narrators: Web-based collection | Time to Change collection of mental health blogs | England | Text |
| 6 | Mind, the Mental Health Charity [ | Guidelines for narrators: Web-based collection | Mind collection of blogs and vlogs | England | Text and video |
| 7 | NAMI California [ | Guidelines for narrators: Web-based collection | National Alliance on Mental Illness collection of “Share your story” blogs | United States | Text |
| 8 | NAMI - You are Not Alone [ | Guidelines for narrators: Web-based collection | National Alliance on Mental Illness collection of “Share your story” blogs | United States | Text |
| 9 | Empower Idaho [ | Guidelines for narrators: Web-based collection | Empower Idaho collection of recovery stories | United States | Video |
| 10 | Crowe [ | Description of curation | Australian Government National Mental Health Commission collection of “Personal stories” | Australia | Text |
| 11 | Resources to Recover [ | Guidelines for narrators: Web-based collection | Resources to Recovery collection of “Stories of hope and recovery” | United States | Text |
| 12 | Boll [ | Guidelines for narrators: Web-based collection | Resources to Recovery collection of “Stories of hope and recovery” | United States | Text |
| 13 | Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration [ | Guidelines for narrators: Web-based collection | Various collections curated by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Association | United States | Text |
| 14 | Mental Health Stories [ | Guidelines for narrators: Web-based collection | Mental Health Stories collection of recovery stories | England | Text |
| 15 | LeCroy and Holschuh [ | Editorial chapter of a book | Book with title “First-person accounts of mental illness and recovery” | United States | Text |
| 16 | Gilbert [ | Editorial chapter of a book | Book with title “Beating Depression: Inspirational Stories of Hope and Recovery” | England | Text |
| 17 | Basset and Stickley [ | Editorial chapter | Book with title “Voices of Experience: Narratives of Mental Health Survivors” | England | Text |
| 18 | Gray [ | Editorial chapter | Book with title “The Madness of Our Lives: Experiences of Mental Breakdown and Recovery “ | United States | Text |
| 19 | International Mental Health Collaborating Network [ | Foreword to booklet | Booklet with title “Recovery Stories: Cornish Journeys of Hope” | England | Text |
| 20 | CMHT Institute of Mental Health [ | Foreword to booklet | Booklet with title “Journey to Recovery” | Singapore | Text |
| 21 | South London and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust [ | Foreword to booklet | Booklet with title “Moving Forward: Stories of Recovery” | England | Text |
| 22 | Oxford University Press: Schizophrenia Bulletin [ | Guidelines for narrators: academic journal | Schizophrenia Bulletin: Collection of “first person accounts” | United States | Text |
| 23 | Psychiatry Online [ | Guidelines for narrators: academic journal | Psychiatric Services: Collection of “personal accounts” | United States | Text |
aUID: unique identifier.
Conceptual framework of curatorial issues and choices.
| Curatorial issues and specific choicesa | UIDb | ||
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| To support narrators’ recovery | 13 |
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| To empower narrators | 13,17 |
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| To help recipients understand mental health problems | 15 |
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| To help recipients talk about mental health problems | 15 |
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| To help recipients understand when to seek help | 12 |
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| To reduce stigma about mental health | 12 |
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| Target people with an interest in mental health | 20 | |
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| Allow commenting on narratives | 6 | |
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| Provide guidance on choices around revealing narrator identity | 8,3 |
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| Develop a supportive relationship with a narrator | 2 |
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| Provide guidance on the emotional impact of creating narratives | 13 |
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| Provide guidance on how sharing might impact relationships | 3 |
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| Signpost narrators to resources that can help if distressed | 8 |
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| Continue to support a narrator after a narrative is public | 3 |
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| Provide guidance to narrators on how to create narratives that exclude features known to trigger harmful behaviors | 6 | |
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| Moderate comments in narratives shared on the Web | 6 |
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| Provide guidance on protection of others identifiable in narratives | 3 | |
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| Targeted requests (through health services, support groups, targeted advertising) | 2,22 |
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| Online calls for submission (on organizational websites) | 7,8 |
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| Interviews with narrators | 2 |
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| Direct submission by narrators | 7,8,12 |
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| Review submitted material | 8 | |
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| Seek a diverse range of narratives | 3 | |
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| Shorten, enhance flow, and remove repetition | 18 | |
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| Destroy identifying information | 21 | |
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| Order narratives by clinical diagnosis | 3 |
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| Order narratives to highlight mutual connections | 18 |
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| Allow a diversity of formats | 3 |
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| Present narratives that conform to a specific format | 11 |
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| Establish clear consent for use (written or verbal) | 3 | |
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| Establish through formal written agreements | 7 | |
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| Position relative to public policy | 17 |
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| Position relative to clinical language | 3 |
aItalicized text indicates a choice identified from a peer-reviewed article.
bUID: unique identifier.