From recovery values to recovery-oriented practice? A qualitative study of professionals' experience when facilitating a recovery-oriented rehabilitation program

Helle Dalum, Inge Kryger Pedersen, Harry Cunningham, Lene F. Eplov

    7 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    Introduction: The recovery model has influenced mental health services and fostered new standards for best practice. However, knowledge about how mental health care professionals (HCPs) experience recoveryoriented programs is sparse.
    Aim/Question: This paper explores HCPs' experiences when facilitating a recovery-oriented rehabilitation program. The research question is howdo HCPs experience a change in their attitude and practicewhen applying recovery-oriented programs?
    Methods: This paper draws on semi-structured in-depth qualitative interviews conducted with 16 HCPs experienced in facilitating a recovery-oriented rehabilitation program in either the USA or Denmark.
    Results: Three themes emerged from the HCPs' reflections on changes in attitudes and practices: “Hopeful Attitude” captures a change in the HCPs' attitude toward a more positive view on the future for clients' living
    with mental illness; “A New Focus in the Dialogue With Clients” thematizes how the HCPs focus more on the individual's own goal for recovery rather than disease-induced goals in the dialog with clients; “A Person-Centered
    Role” comprises a shift in the professional role whereby the HCPs value the client's own ideas in addition to the professional's standards.
    Conclusion: This study supports the theory of the recoverymodel by its empirical findings and indications that when facilitating a recovery-oriented program, HCPs experience recovery-oriented changes in their attitude toward life
    with mental illness, and it alters their professional practice toward a stronger focus on client's own goals during treatment. More studies are needed to further clarify how changes in HCPs' attitudes translate into changes in mental health practices.
    Original languageEnglish
    JournalArchives of Psychiatric Nursing
    Volume29
    Issue number6
    Pages (from-to)419-425
    ISSN0883-9417
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 2015

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