| Literature DB >> 33736520 |
François Lauzier-Jobin1, Janie Houle1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: People in recovery from anxiety, depressive or bipolar disorders can receive both formal (from practitioners) and informal help (from family and friends). These two types of helping relationships have often been studied separately as either therapeutic relationships or social support. Yet, the mechanisms of these two forms of help have not been empirically compared in the context of mental health recovery. AIMS: The purpose of this study is to compare the mechanisms of informal help and formal help in recovery by combining the perspectives of individuals in recovery, their informal helper and their practitioner.Entities:
Keywords: Personal recovery; agency; critical realism; deductive thematic analysis; helping relationship; mixed method; social support; therapeutic relationship
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33736520 PMCID: PMC9014766 DOI: 10.1177/00207640211004988
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Soc Psychiatry ISSN: 0020-7640
Participant inclusion criteria.
| For people in recovery | For helpers (informal and formal) |
| (a) 18 years old or over | (a) 18 years old or over |
| (b) Speak French | (b) Speak French |
| (c) Able to answer interview questions | (c) Able and willing to answer interview questions |
| (d) Diagnosed with depression or anxiety at least 12 months prior to interview (self-reported) | (d) Identified by person in recovery as having significantly contributed to their recovery |
| (e) Consider self in recovery (self-reported) | |
| (f) Symptoms severity must not be high, as measured on the Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9) and the Generalised Anxiety Disorder Assessment (GAD-7) | (e) Practitioners had to have workplace authorisation to participate in study, if applicable. |
| (g) Able and willing to designate two significant helpers (one informal and one practitioner) to be interviewed regarding their helper role. |
Similarities and differences between formal and informal helping relationships.
| Categories | Similarities and differences | Citations |
|---|---|---|
| Presence and availability | Similarity: Family members and friends as much as practitioners were there, present and available. |
|
| Difference: | ||
| Continuous presence of family members and friends. | ||
| Ad hoc presence and availability of practitioners. | ||
| Companionship | Difference: |
|
| Fun and shared activities at centre of relationship with family and friends. | ||
| Practitioner had to set boundaries on this personal dimension. | ||
| Reciprocity | Difference: People in recovery saw their relationship with informal helpers as more symmetrical, mutual and reciprocal; this was rarely the case in their relationship with practitioners. |
|
| Communication | Similarities: |
|
| Communication rested on active listening and an open, non-judgemental attitude. | ||
| Speaking and discussions made it possible to ‘grow through understanding’. | ||
| Differences: | ||
| Communication was more composed with practitioners and more unfiltered with family members and friends. | ||
| Topics covered varied according to type of relationship: more delimited with practitioners (vs. talking about this and that with informal helpers), but more in depth. | ||
| Emotional involvement | Differences: |
|
| Informal helpers were more invested emotionally, whereas practitioners empathised (instead of sympathising). | ||
| Practitioners were outsiders without the same emotional attachment. This distance afforded a sense of safety and freedom that facilitated intervention. |