Details

Psychological Recovery


Psychological Recovery

Beyond Mental Illness
1. Aufl.

von: Retta Andresen, Lindsay G. Oades, Peter Caputi

38,99 €

Verlag: Wiley-Blackwell
Format: EPUB
Veröffentl.: 13.07.2011
ISBN/EAN: 9781119975168
Sprache: englisch
Anzahl Seiten: 216

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Beschreibungen

This book offers a succinct model of recovery from serious mental illness, synthesizing stories of lived experience to provide a framework for clinical work and research in the field of recovery.<br /> • Places the process of recovery within the context of normal human growth and development<br /> • Compares and contrasts concepts of recovery from mental illness with the literature on grief, loss and trauma<br /> • Situates recovery within the growing field of positive psychology – focusing on the active, hopeful process<br /> • Describes a consumer-oriented, stage-based model of psychological recovery which is unique in its focus on intrapersonal processes
Foreword by Jon Strang. <p>Preface.</p> <p>Part I – Recovery in Historical Context.</p> <p>Chapter 1 Introduction: Recovery from schizophrenia.</p> <p>Chapter 2 Conceptualising recovery: A consumer-oriented approach.</p> <p>Part II – Elaboration of the model: from Hopelessness to Flourishing.</p> <p>Chapter 3 Moratorium - The first stage of psychological recovery.</p> <p>Chapter 4 Awareness – The second stage of psychological recovery .</p> <p>Chapter 5 Preparation - The third stage of psychological recovery.</p> <p>Chapter 6 Rebuilding - The fourth stage of recovery.</p> <p>Chapter 7 Growth – the fifth stage of psychological recovery.</p> <p>Chapter 8 Common questions regarding the stage model of psychological Recovery.</p> <p>Part III – Measuring recovery.</p> <p>Chapter 9 Recovery-oriented outcome measurement.</p> <p>Part IV– Towards a positive future.</p> <p>Chapter 10 Psychological Recovery and Positive Psychology.</p> <p>Chapter 11 Reflections and future directions.</p> <p>Afterword.</p> <p>Index.</p>
"This is an exciting and important book that is sure to stimulate dialogue and debate within the rapidly growing international recovery movement." (TMCnet.com, 5 December 2011)<br />
<p><b>Retta Andresen</b> is a Research Fellow at the University of Wollongong, Australia. Her research into the process of recovery and its measurement has received national and international recognition and interest. <p><b>Lindsay Oades</b> is a Clinical and Health Psychologist and Director of the Australian Institute of Business Wellbeing at the University of Wollongong, Australia. He has been awarded numerous national awards for his mental health research. <p><b>Peter Caputi</b> is an Associate Professor in the School of Psychology at the University of Wollongong, Australia. He is on the editorial board for the <i>Journal of Constructivist Psychology</i> and a consulting editor for <i>The Journal of Psychology: Interdisciplinary and Applied.</i>
<p>This book addresses an international challenge in relation to recovery: how to bring empirical investigation to the consumer-developed understanding of recovery. The authors rise to this challenge superbly. They rightly position recovery as arising from the lived experience of people who use mental health services, and then develop an empirically-based understanding of the stages and processes of recovery. This empirical work has been internationally infl uential and the detailed description will be of wide interest. The authors then contextualise their work within the fi eld of positive psychology and well-being research – areas which will directly inform the evolution of mental health services in the 21st century. I recommend this book, and hope it is widely read.<br> <b><i>Mike Slade,</i></b><i> Researcher (researchintorecovery.com) and Author of 'Personal Recovery and Mental Illness'</i> <p>This book begins by examining the history of schizophrenia, and discerning the roots of pessimism in its outlook. The authors then introduce the concept of recovery, and their own model of its process, which is via a series of stages, which they show can be measured and used in treatment. One great value of a work such as this is that it injects factors that are often lacking in treatment environments, and sometimes in the minds of service providers, namely hope and optimism. As such, this book will be, or should be, of interest to all those who work with people with serious mental illnesses.<br> <b><i>Tom Trauer,</i></b><i> Professor, Department of Psychiatry, University of Melbourne, Australia</i> <p>This exciting and important book is sure to stimulate dialogue and debate within the rapidly growing international recovery movement. Based on many personal stories analysed by leading recovery researchers in Australia, this book offers the beginning of a road map for the recovery journey for people with serious mental illnesses, their loved ones and mental health practitioners alike.<br> <b><i>Larry Davidson,</i></b><i> Professor of Psychiatry, Yale University, USA</i> <p>Many countries have introduced policies that stipulate mental health services be 'recovery-oriented'. However, there is no widely accepted definition of recovery, understanding of the process and how services are to become recovery-oriented, or consensus on how recovery should be assessed. Where conceptual models have been proposed, they have tended to be complex and do not lend themselves readily to routine use and research purposes. <p>This book presents a consumer-orientated, stage-based model of psychological recovery from serious mental illness, utilising stories of lived experience to provide a framework for clinical work and research in the fi eld of recovery. Each stage of the recovery process is illustrated with mental health consumers' experiences, which are then placed in the context of existing theory in fi elds such as trauma, hope, self-determination, identity and wellbeing. Three measures of recovery are also introduced, adding recovery-based options to the range of clinical outcome measures commonly used in mental health settings. <p>Placing recovery within the growing fi eld of positive psychology, this book fi lls a need in the mental health professional community for a succinct, yet fl exible, model of recovery from mental illness. It offers a thorough grounding in the history of the concept of recovery, a deep appreciation of the mental health consumer's experience of psychological recovery, an understanding of the conceptual model and an awareness of the issues surrounding recovery measurement.
This book addresses an international challenge in relation to recovery: how to bring empirical investigation to the consumer-developed understanding of recovery. The authors rise to this challenge superbly. They rightly position recovery as arising from the lived experience of people who use mental health services, and then develop an empirically-based understanding of the stages and processes of recovery. This empirical work has been internationally influential and the detailed description will be of wide interest. The authors then contextualise their work within the field of positive psychology and well-being research –areas which will directly inform the evolution of mental health services in the 21<sup>st</sup> Century. I recommend this book, and hope it is widely read.<br /> —<b><i>Mike Slade</i></b><i>, Researcher (researchintorecovery.com) and Author of ‘Personal Recovery and Mental Illness’</i> <p>This book begins by examining the history of schizophrenia, and discerning the roots of pessimism in its outlook. The authors then introduce the concept of recovery, and their own model of its process, which is via a series of stages, which they show can be measured and used in treatment. One great value of a work such as this is that it injects factors that are often lacking in treatment environments, and sometimes in the minds of service providers, namely hope and optimism. As such, this book will be, or should be, of interest to all those who work with people with serious mental illnesses.<br /> —<b><i>Tom Trauer</i></b><i>, Professor, Department of Psychiatry, University of Melbourne, Australia</i></p> <p>This is an exciting and important book that is sure to stimulate dialogue and debate within the rapidly growing international recovery movement. Based on years of interviews of, and conversations with, people with first-hand experiences of recovery conducted by leading recovery researchers in Australia, this book offers the beginning of a road map for the recovery journey that will be found useful by people with serious mental illnesses, their loved ones, and mental health practitioners alike.<br /> —<b><i>Larry Davidson</i></b><i>, Professor of Psychiatry, Yale University</i></p>

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