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Wikipedia

Recovery model

The recovery model, recovery approach or psychological recovery is an approach to mental disorder or substance dependence that emphasizes and supports a person's potential for recovery. Recovery is generally seen in this model as a personal journey rather than a set outcome, and one that may involve developing hope, a secure base and sense of self, supportive relationships, empowerment, social inclusion, coping skills, and meaning.[1] Recovery sees symptoms as a continuum of the norm rather than an aberration and rejects sane-insane dichotomy.

William Anthony,[2] Director of the Boston Centre for Psychiatric Rehabilitation developed a cornerstone definition of mental health recovery in 1993. "Recovery is a deeply personal, unique process of changing one's attitudes, values, feelings, goals, skills and/or roles. It is a way of living a satisfying, hopeful, and contributing life even with limitations caused by the illness. Recovery involves the development of new meaning and purpose in one's life as one grows beyond the catastrophic effects of mental illness."[3][4]

The use of the concept in mental health emerged as deinstitutionalization resulted in more individuals living in the community. It gained impetus as a social movement due to a perceived failure by services or wider society to adequately support social inclusion, and to studies demonstrating that many people do recover. A recovery approach has now been explicitly adopted as the guiding principle of the mental health or substance dependency policies of a number of countries and states. In many cases practical steps are being taken to base services on a recovery model, although a range of obstacles, concerns and criticisms have been raised both by service providers and by recipients of services. A number of standardized measures have been developed to assess aspects of recovery, although there is some variation between professionalized models and those originating in the psychiatric survivors movement.

According to a study, a combined social and physical environment intervention has the potential to improve the need for recovery. However, the study's general healthy and well-functioning population made it challenging to have a significant impact. The researchers recommended implementing the intervention among a population with higher baseline values on need for recovery and providing physical activity opportunities, such as organizing lunch walking or yoga classes at work. Additionally, integrating a social media platform strategically with incentives for regular use, linking to other platforms such as Facebook, and implementing more drastic physical interventions, such as restructuring an entire department floor, may be necessary for improving the intervention's effectiveness. The study concluded that the relatively simple environment modifications used, such as placing signs to promote stair use, did not result in changes in need for recovery.[5]

History edit

In general medicine and psychiatry, recovery has long been used to refer to the end of a particular experience or episode of illness. The broader concept of "recovery" as a general philosophy and model was first popularized in regard to recovery from substance abuse/drug addiction, for example within twelve-step programs.

Mental health recovery emerged in Geel, Belgium in the 13th century. Saint Dymphna—the patron saint of mental illness—was martyred there by her father in the 7th century. The Church of Saint Dymphna (built in 1349) became a pilgrimage destination for those seeking help with their psychiatric conditions. By the late 1400s, so many pilgrims were coming to Geel that the townspeople began hosting them as guests in their homes. This tradition of community recovery continues to this day. [6][7][8]

More widespread application of recovery models to psychiatric disorders is comparatively recent. The concept of recovery can be traced back as far as 1840, when John Thomas Perceval, son of Prime Minister Spencer Perceval, wrote of his personal recovery from the psychosis that he experienced from 1830 until 1832, a recovery that he obtained despite the "treatment" he received from the "lunatic" doctors who attended him.[9] But by consensus the main impetus for the development came from within the consumer/survivor/ex-patient movement, a grassroots self-help and advocacy initiative, particularly within the United States during the late 1980s and early 1990s.[10] The professional literature, starting with the psychiatric rehabilitation movement in particular, began to incorporate the concept from the early 1990s in the United States, followed by New Zealand and more recently across nearly all countries within the "First World".[11] Similar approaches developed around the same time, without necessarily using the term recovery, in Italy, the Netherlands and the UK.

Developments were fueled by a number of long-term outcome studies of people with "major mental illnesses" in populations from virtually every continent, including landmark cross-national studies by the World Health Organization from the 1970s and 1990s, showing unexpectedly high rates of complete or partial recovery, with exact statistics varying by region and the criteria used. The cumulative impact of personal stories or testimony of recovery has also been a powerful force behind the development of recovery approaches and policies. A key issue became how service consumers could maintain the ownership and authenticity of recovery concepts while also supporting them in professional policy and practice.[12]

Increasingly, recovery became both a subject of mental health services research and a term emblematic of many of the goals of the Consumer/Survivor/Ex-Patient Movement. The concept of recovery was often defined and applied differently by consumers/survivors and professionals. Specific policy and clinical strategies were developed to implement recovery principles although key questions remained.[10][13]

Elements of recovery edit

It has been emphasized that each individual's journey to recovery is a deeply personal process, as well as being related to an individual's community and society.[14] A number of features or signs of recovery have been proposed as often core elements[15] and comprehensively they have been categorized under the concept of CHIME.[16] CHIME is a mnemonic of connectedness, hope & optimism, identity, meaning & purpose and empowerment.[17]

Connectedness and supportive relationships edit

A common aspect of recovery is said to be the presence of others who believe in the person's potential to recover[18][19] and who stand by them. According to Relational Cultural Theory as developed by Jean Baker Miller, recovery requires mutuality and empathy in relationships.[18] The theory states this requires relationships that embody respect, authenticity, and emotional availability.[18][20] Supportive relationships can also be made safer through predictability and avoiding shaming and violence.[20][18][21] While mental health professionals can offer a particular limited kind of relationship and help foster hope, relationships with friends, family and the community are said to often be of wider and longer-term importance.[22] Case managers can play the role of connecting recovering persons to services that the recovering person may have limited access to, such as food stamps and medical care.[23][24] Others who have experienced similar difficulties and are on a journey of recovery can also play a role in establishing community and combating a recovering person's feelings of isolation.[18] An example of a recovery approach that fosters a sense of community to combat feelings of isolation is the safe house or transitional housing model of rehabilitation. This approach supports victims of trauma through a community-centered, transitional housing method that provides social services, healthcare, and psychological support to navigate through and past experiences. Safe houses aim to support survivors on account of their individual needs and can effectively rehabilitate those recovering from issues such as sexual violence and drug addiction without criminalization.[25] Additionally, safe houses provide a comfortable space where survivors can be listened to and uplifted through compassion.[26] In practice, this can be accomplished through one on one interviews with other recovering persons,[18] engaging in communal story circles,[18] or peer-led support groups.[27] Those who share the same values and outlooks more generally (not just in the area of mental health) may also be particularly important. It is said that one-way relationships based on being helped can actually be devaluing and potentially re-traumatizing,[21] and that reciprocal relationships and mutual support networks can be of more value to self-esteem and recovery.[14][18][20][19]

Hope edit

Finding and nurturing hope has been described as a key to recovery. It is said to include not just optimism but a sustainable belief in oneself and a willingness to persevere through uncertainty and setbacks. Hope may start at a certain turning point, or emerge gradually as a small and fragile feeling, and may fluctuate with despair. It is said to involve trusting, and risking disappointment, failure and further hurt.[14]

Identity edit

Recovery of a durable sense of self (if it had been lost or taken away) has been proposed as an important element. A research review suggested that people sometimes achieve this by "positive withdrawal"—regulating social involvement and negotiating public space in order to only move towards others in a way that feels safe yet meaningful; and nurturing personal psychological space that allows room for developing understanding and a broad sense of self, interests, spirituality, etc. It was suggested that the process is usually greatly facilitated by experiences of interpersonal acceptance, mutuality, and a sense of social belonging; and is often challenging in the face of the typical barrage of overt and covert negative messages that come from the broader social context.[28] Being able to move on can mean having to cope with feelings of loss, which may include despair and anger. When an individual is ready for change, a process of grieving is initiated. It may require accepting past suffering and lost opportunities or lost time.[14]

Formation of healthy coping strategies and meaningful internal schema edit

The development of personal coping strategies (including self-management or self-help) is said to be an important element. This can involve making use of medication or psychotherapy if the patient is fully informed and listened to, including about adverse effects and about which methods fit with the consumer's life and their journey of recovery. Developing coping and problem solving skills to manage individual traits and problem issues (which may or may not be seen as symptoms of mental disorder) may require a person becoming their own expert, in order to identify key stress points and possible crisis points, and to understand and develop personal ways of responding and coping.[14] Developing a sense of meaning and overall purpose is said to be important for sustaining the recovery process. This may involve recovering or developing a social or work role. It may also involve renewing, finding or developing a guiding philosophy, religion, politics or culture.[14] From a postmodern perspective, this can be seen as developing a narrative.[29]

Empowerment and building a secure base edit

Building a positive culture of healing is essential in the recovery approach. Since recovering is a long process, a strong supportive network can be helpful.[30] Appropriate housing, a sufficient income, freedom from violence, and adequate access to health care have also been proposed[31] as important tools to empowering someone and increasing her/his self-sufficiency.[18][23][21][32] Empowerment and self-determination are said to be important to recovery for reducing the social and psychological effects of stress and trauma. Women's Empowerment Theory suggests that recovery from mental illness, substance abuse, and trauma requires helping survivors understand their rights so they can increase their capacity to make autonomous choices.[18][32] This can mean develop the confidence for independent assertive decision making and help-seeking which translates into proper medication and active self care practices. Achieving social inclusion and overcoming challenging social stigma and prejudice about mental distress/disorder/difference is also an important part of empowerment. Advocates of Women's Empowerment Theory argue it is important to recognize that a recovering person's view of self is perpetuated by stereotypes and combating those narratives.[18] Empowerment according to this logic requires reframing a survivor's view of self and the world.[18][19] In practice, empowerment and building a secure base require mutually supportive relationships between survivors and service providers, identifying a survivor's existing strengths, and an awareness of the survivor's trauma and cultural context.[21][18][19][27]

Concepts of recovery edit

Varied definitions edit

What constitutes 'recovery', or a recovery model, is a matter of ongoing debate both in theory and in practice. In general, professionalized clinical models tend to focus on improvement in particular symptoms and functions, and on the role of treatments, while consumer/survivor models tend to put more emphasis on peer support, empowerment and real-world personal experience.[33][34][35] "Recovery from", the medical approach, is defined by a dwindling of symptoms, whereas "recovery in", the peer approach, may still involve symptoms, but the person feels they are gaining more control over their life.[36] Similarly, recovery may be viewed in terms of a social model of disability rather than a medical model of disability, and there may be differences in the acceptance of diagnostic "labels" and treatments.[14]

A review of research suggested that writers on recovery are rarely explicit about which of the various concepts they are employing. The reviewers classified the approaches they found in to broadly "rehabilitation" perspectives, which they defined as being focused on life and meaning within the context of enduring disability, and "clinical" perspectives which focused on observable remission of symptoms and restoration of functioning.[37] From a psychiatric rehabilitation perspective, a number of additional qualities of the recovery process have been suggested, including that it: can occur without professional intervention, but requires people who believe in and stand by the person in recovery; does not depend on believing certain theories about the cause of conditions; can be said to occur even if symptoms later re-occur, but does change the frequency and duration of symptoms; requires recovery from the consequences of a psychiatric condition as well as the condition itself; is not linear but does tend to take place as a series of small steps; does not mean the person was never really psychiatrically disabled; focuses on wellness not illness, and on consumer choice.[38]

A consensus statement on mental health recovery from US agencies, that involved some consumer input, defined recovery as a journey of healing and transformation enabling a person with a mental health problem to live a meaningful life in a community of his or her choice while striving to achieve his or her full potential. Ten fundamental components were elucidated, all assuming that the person continues to be a "consumer" or to have a "mental disability".[39] Conferences have been held on the importance of the "elusive" concept from the perspectives of consumers and psychiatrists.[40]

One approach to recovery known as the Tidal Model focuses on the continuous process of change inherent in all people, conveying the meaning of experiences through water metaphors. Crisis is seen as involving opportunity; creativity is valued; and different domains are explored such as sense of security, personal narrative and relationships. Initially developed by mental health nurses along with service users, Tidal is a particular model that has been specifically researched. Based on a discrete set of values (the Ten Commitments), it emphasizes the importance of each person's own voice, resourcefulness and wisdom. Since 1999, projects based on the Tidal Model have been established in several countries.

For many, recovery has a political as well as personal implication—where to recover is to: find meaning; challenge prejudice (including diagnostic "labels" in some cases); perhaps to be a "bad" non-compliant patient and refuse to accept the indoctrination of the system; to reclaim a chosen life and place within society; and to validate the self.[41] Recovery can thus be viewed as one manifestation of empowerment. Such an empowerment model may emphasize that conditions are not necessarily permanent; that other people have recovered who can be role models and share experiences; and that "symptoms" can be understood as expressions of distress related to emotions and other people. One such model from the US National Empowerment Center proposes a number of principles of how people recover and seeks to identify the characteristics of people in recovery.[42]

In general, recovery may be seen as more of a philosophy or attitude than a specific model, requiring fundamentally that "we regain personal power and a valued place in our communities. Sometimes we need services to support us to get there".[43]

Recovery from substance dependence edit

Particular kinds of recovery models have been adopted in drug rehabilitation services. While interventions in this area have tended to focus on harm reduction, particularly through substitute prescribing (or alternatively requiring total abstinence) recovery approaches have emphasized the need to simultaneously address the whole of people's lives, and to encourage aspirations while promoting equal access and opportunities within society. Some examples of harm reduction services include overdose reversal medications (such as Narcan), substance testing kits, supplies for sterile injections, HIV, HBV, and HCV at-home testing equipment– and trauma-informed care in the form of group therapy, community building/events, case management, and rental assistance services.[44] The purpose of this model is to rehabilitate those experiencing addiction in a holistic way rather than through law enforcement and criminal justice-based intervention which can fail to address victims’ circumstances on a need-by-need basis.[25] From the perspective of services the work may include helping people with "developing the skills to prevent relapse into further illegal drug taking, rebuilding broken relationships or forging new ones, actively engaging in meaningful activities and taking steps to build a home and provide for themselves and their families. Milestones could be as simple as gaining weight, re-establishing relationships with friends, or building self-esteem. What is key is that recovery is sustained.".[45] Key to the philosophy of the recovery movement is the aim for an equal relationship between "Experts by Profession" and "Experts by Experience".[46]

Trauma-Informed Recovery edit

Trauma-Informed care is a philosophy for recovery that combines the conditions and needs of people recovering from mental illness and/or substance abuse into one framework. This framework combines all of the elements of the Recovery Approach and adds an awareness of trauma. Advocates of trauma-informed care argue the principles and strategies should be applied to individuals experiencing mental illness, substance dependence, and trauma as these three often occur simultaneously or as result of each other.[47][19][23][21][27] The paradigms surrounding trauma-informed care began to shift in 1998 and 1999. In 1998, the Center for Mental Health Services, the Center for Substance Abuse Treatment, and the Center for Substance Abuse Prevention collaborated to fund 14 sites to develop integrated services in order to address the interrelated effects of violence, mental health, and substance abuse.[47] In 1999, the National Association of State Mental Health Program Directors passed a resolution recognizing the impact of violence and trauma[47] and developed a toolkit of resources for the implementation of trauma services in state mental health agencies.[19] Trauma-informed care has been supported in academia as well. Scholars claim that neglecting the role of trauma in a person's story can interfere with recovery in the form of misdiagnosis, inaccurate treatment, or retraumatization.[23][21][18][27][47][20] Some principles of trauma-informed care include validating survivor experiences and resiliency, aiming to increase a survivor's control over her/his/their recovery, creating atmospheres for recovery that embody consistency and confidentiality, minimizing the possibilities of triggering past trauma, and integrating survivors/recovering persons in service evaluation.[27][19][18][21] In practice, trauma-informed care has shown to be most effective when every participant in a service providing context to be committed to following these principles.[23][21] In addition, these principles can apply to all steps of the recovery process within a service providing context, including outreach and engagement, screening, advocacy, crisis intervention, and resource coordination.[19][27][18][20][21] The overall goal in trauma-informed care is facilitating healing and empowerment using strengths-based empowerment practices and a comprehensive array of services that integrate co-occurring disorders and the multitude of needs a recovering person might have, such as drug treatment, housing, relationship building, and parenting support.[23][21][27]

These approaches are in contrast to traditional care systems. Advocates of trauma-informed care critique traditional service delivery systems, such as standard hospitals, for failing to understand the role of trauma in a patients life.[47] Traditional service delivery systems are also critiqued for isolating the conditions of a recovering person and not addressing conditions such as substance abuse and mental illness simultaneously as part of one source.[23][47] Specific practices in traditional service delivery systems, such as unnecessary procedures, undressing for examinations, involuntary hospitalizations, crowded emergency rooms, and limited time for providers to meet with patients, have all been critiqued as insensitive to persons recovering from trauma and consequential mental illness or substance abuse.[21][20][47] Limited resources and time in the United States healthcare system can make the implementation of trauma-informed care difficult.[20]

There are other challenges to trauma-informed care besides limits in the United States healthcare system that can make trauma-informed care ineffective for treating persons recovering from mental illness or substance dependence. Advocates of trauma-informed care argue implementation requires a strong commitment from leadership in an agency to train staff members to be trauma-aware, but this training can be costly and time-consuming.[47][27][19] "Trauma-informed care" and "trauma" also have contested definitions and can be hard to measure in a real world service setting.[19] Another barrier to trauma-informed care is the necessity of screening for histories of trauma.[19][21][20][47][27] While agencies need to screen for histories of trauma in order to give the best care, there can be feelings of shame and fear of being invalidated that can prevent a recovering person from disclosing their personal experiences.[20]

Concerns edit

Some concerns have been raised about a recovery approach in theory and in practice. These include suggestions that it: is an old concept; only happens to very few people; represents an irresponsible fad; happens only as a result of active treatment; implies a cure; can only be implemented with new resources; adds to the burden of already stretched providers; is neither reimbursable nor evidence based; devalues the role of professional intervention; and increases providers' exposure to risk and liability.[48]

Other criticisms focused on practical implementation by service providers include that: the recovery model can be manipulated by officials to serve various political and financial interests including withdrawing services and pushing people out before they're ready; that it is becoming a new orthodoxy or bandwagon that neglects the empowerment aspects and structural problems of societies and primarily represents a middle class experience; that it hides the continued dominance of a medical model; and that it potentially increases social exclusion and marginalizes those who don't fit into a recovery narrative.[49]

There have been specific tensions between recovery models and "evidence-based practice" models in the transformation of US mental health services based on the recommendations of the New Freedom Commission on Mental Health.[50] The commission's emphasis on recovery has been interpreted by some critics as saying that everyone can fully recover through sheer will power and therefore as giving false hope and implicitly blaming those who may be unable to recover.[51] However, the critics have themselves been charged with undermining consumer rights and failing to recognize that the model is intended to support a person in their personal journey rather than expecting a given outcome, and that it relates to social and political support and empowerment as well as the individual.[52]

Various stages of resistance to recovery approaches have been identified amongst staff in traditional services, starting with "Our people are much sicker than yours. They won't be able to recover" and ending in "Our doctors will never agree to this". However, ways to harness the energy of this perceived resistance and use it to move forward have been proposed.[53] In addition, staff training materials have been developed by various organisations, for example by the National Empowerment Center.[54][55][56][57]

Some positives and negatives of recovery models were highlighted in a study of a community mental health service for people diagnosed with schizophrenia. It was concluded that while the approach may be a useful corrective to the usual style of case management - at least when genuinely chosen and shaped by each unique individual on the ground - serious social, institutional and personal difficulties made it essential that there be sufficient ongoing effective support with stress management and coping in daily life. Cultural biases and uncertainties were also noted in the 'North American' model of recovery in practice, reflecting views about the sorts of contributions and lifestyles that should be considered valuable or acceptable.[58]

Assessment edit

A number of standardized questionnaires and assessments have been developed to try to assess aspects of an individual's recovery journey. These include the Milestones of Recovery (MOR) Scale, Recovery Enhancing Environment (REE) measure, Recovery Measurement Tool (RMT), Recovery Oriented System Indicators (ROSI) Measure,[59] Stages of Recovery Instrument (STORI),[60] and numerous related instruments.[61]

The data-collection systems and terminology used by services and funders are said to be typically incompatible with recovery frameworks, so methods of adapting them have been developed.[62] It has also been argued that the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (and to some extent any system of categorical classification of mental disorders) uses definitions and terminology that are inconsistent with a recovery model, leading to suggestions that the next version, the DSM-V, requires: greater sensitivity to cultural issues and gender; to recognize the need for others to change as well as just those singled out for a diagnosis of disorder; and to adopt a dimensional approach to assessment that better captures individuality and does not erroneously imply excess psychopathology or chronicity.[63]

National policies and implementation edit

United States and Canada edit

The New Freedom Commission on Mental Health has proposed to transform the mental health system in the US by shifting the paradigm of care from traditional medical psychiatric treatment toward the concept of recovery, and the American Psychiatric Association has endorsed a recovery model from a psychiatric services perspective.[64][65]

The US Department of Health and Human Services reports developing national and state initiatives to empower consumers and support recovery, with specific committees planning to launch nationwide pro-recovery, anti-stigma education campaigns; develop and synthesize recovery policies; train consumers in carrying out evaluations of mental health systems; and help further the development of peer-run services.[66] Mental Health service directors and planners are providing guidance to help state services implement recovery approaches.[67]

Some US states, such as California (see the California Mental Health Services Act), Wisconsin and Ohio, already report redesigning their mental health systems to stress recovery model values like hope, healing, empowerment, social connectedness, human rights, and recovery-oriented services.[68]

At least some parts of the Canadian Mental Health Association, such as the Ontario region, have adopted recovery as a guiding principle for reforming and developing the mental health system.[31]

New Zealand and Australia edit

Since 1998, all mental health services in New Zealand have been required by government policy to use a recovery approach[69][70] and mental health professionals are expected to demonstrate competence in the recovery model.[71] Australia's National Mental Health Plan 2003-2008 states that services should adopt a recovery orientation[72] although there is variation between Australian states and territories in the level of knowledge, commitment and implementation.[73]

UK and Ireland edit

In 2005, the National Institute for Mental Health in England (NIMHE) endorsed a recovery model as a possible guiding principle of mental health service provision and public education.[74] The National Health Service is implementing a recovery approach in at least some regions, and has developed a new professional role of Support Time and Recovery Worker.[75] Centre for Mental Health issued a 2008 policy paper proposing that the recovery approach is an idea "whose time has come"[49][76] and, in partnership with the NHS Confederation Mental Health Network, and support and funding from the Department of Health, manages the Implementing Recovery through Organisational Change (ImROC) nationwide project that aims to put recovery at the heart of mental health services in the UK.[77] The Scottish Executive has included the promotion and support of recovery as one of its four key mental health aims and funded a Scottish Recovery Network to facilitate this.[78] A 2006 review of nursing in Scotland recommended a recovery approach as the model for mental health nursing care and intervention.[79] The Mental Health Commission of Ireland reports that its guiding documents place the service user at the core and emphasize an individual's personal journey towards recovery.[80]

See also edit

References edit

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Further reading edit

  • Karasaki et al.,(2013). The Place of Volition in Addiction: Differing Approaches and their Implications for Policy and Service Provision.

External links edit

  • The Strengths Model: A Recovery-Oriented Approach to Mental Health Services, St Vincent's Hospital, Melbourne, 2014.
  • (PDF)
  • National Resource Center on Psychiatric Advance Directives

recovery, model, recovery, model, recovery, approach, psychological, recovery, approach, mental, disorder, substance, dependence, that, emphasizes, supports, person, potential, recovery, recovery, generally, seen, this, model, personal, journey, rather, than, . The recovery model recovery approach or psychological recovery is an approach to mental disorder or substance dependence that emphasizes and supports a person s potential for recovery Recovery is generally seen in this model as a personal journey rather than a set outcome and one that may involve developing hope a secure base and sense of self supportive relationships empowerment social inclusion coping skills and meaning 1 Recovery sees symptoms as a continuum of the norm rather than an aberration and rejects sane insane dichotomy William Anthony 2 Director of the Boston Centre for Psychiatric Rehabilitation developed a cornerstone definition of mental health recovery in 1993 Recovery is a deeply personal unique process of changing one s attitudes values feelings goals skills and or roles It is a way of living a satisfying hopeful and contributing life even with limitations caused by the illness Recovery involves the development of new meaning and purpose in one s life as one grows beyond the catastrophic effects of mental illness 3 4 The use of the concept in mental health emerged as deinstitutionalization resulted in more individuals living in the community It gained impetus as a social movement due to a perceived failure by services or wider society to adequately support social inclusion and to studies demonstrating that many people do recover A recovery approach has now been explicitly adopted as the guiding principle of the mental health or substance dependency policies of a number of countries and states In many cases practical steps are being taken to base services on a recovery model although a range of obstacles concerns and criticisms have been raised both by service providers and by recipients of services A number of standardized measures have been developed to assess aspects of recovery although there is some variation between professionalized models and those originating in the psychiatric survivors movement According to a study a combined social and physical environment intervention has the potential to improve the need for recovery However the study s general healthy and well functioning population made it challenging to have a significant impact The researchers recommended implementing the intervention among a population with higher baseline values on need for recovery and providing physical activity opportunities such as organizing lunch walking or yoga classes at work Additionally integrating a social media platform strategically with incentives for regular use linking to other platforms such as Facebook and implementing more drastic physical interventions such as restructuring an entire department floor may be necessary for improving the intervention s effectiveness The study concluded that the relatively simple environment modifications used such as placing signs to promote stair use did not result in changes in need for recovery 5 Contents 1 History 2 Elements of recovery 2 1 Connectedness and supportive relationships 2 2 Hope 2 3 Identity 2 4 Formation of healthy coping strategies and meaningful internal schema 2 5 Empowerment and building a secure base 3 Concepts of recovery 3 1 Varied definitions 3 2 Recovery from substance dependence 3 3 Trauma Informed Recovery 3 4 Concerns 3 5 Assessment 4 National policies and implementation 4 1 United States and Canada 4 2 New Zealand and Australia 4 3 UK and Ireland 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksHistory editIn general medicine and psychiatry recovery has long been used to refer to the end of a particular experience or episode of illness The broader concept of recovery as a general philosophy and model was first popularized in regard to recovery from substance abuse drug addiction for example within twelve step programs Mental health recovery emerged in Geel Belgium in the 13th century Saint Dymphna the patron saint of mental illness was martyred there by her father in the 7th century The Church of Saint Dymphna built in 1349 became a pilgrimage destination for those seeking help with their psychiatric conditions By the late 1400s so many pilgrims were coming to Geel that the townspeople began hosting them as guests in their homes This tradition of community recovery continues to this day 6 7 8 More widespread application of recovery models to psychiatric disorders is comparatively recent The concept of recovery can be traced back as far as 1840 when John Thomas Perceval son of Prime Minister Spencer Perceval wrote of his personal recovery from the psychosis that he experienced from 1830 until 1832 a recovery that he obtained despite the treatment he received from the lunatic doctors who attended him 9 But by consensus the main impetus for the development came from within the consumer survivor ex patient movement a grassroots self help and advocacy initiative particularly within the United States during the late 1980s and early 1990s 10 The professional literature starting with the psychiatric rehabilitation movement in particular began to incorporate the concept from the early 1990s in the United States followed by New Zealand and more recently across nearly all countries within the First World 11 Similar approaches developed around the same time without necessarily using the term recovery in Italy the Netherlands and the UK Developments were fueled by a number of long term outcome studies of people with major mental illnesses in populations from virtually every continent including landmark cross national studies by the World Health Organization from the 1970s and 1990s showing unexpectedly high rates of complete or partial recovery with exact statistics varying by region and the criteria used The cumulative impact of personal stories or testimony of recovery has also been a powerful force behind the development of recovery approaches and policies A key issue became how service consumers could maintain the ownership and authenticity of recovery concepts while also supporting them in professional policy and practice 12 Increasingly recovery became both a subject of mental health services research and a term emblematic of many of the goals of the Consumer Survivor Ex Patient Movement The concept of recovery was often defined and applied differently by consumers survivors and professionals Specific policy and clinical strategies were developed to implement recovery principles although key questions remained 10 13 Elements of recovery editIt has been emphasized that each individual s journey to recovery is a deeply personal process as well as being related to an individual s community and society 14 A number of features or signs of recovery have been proposed as often core elements 15 and comprehensively they have been categorized under the concept of CHIME 16 CHIME is a mnemonic of connectedness hope amp optimism identity meaning amp purpose and empowerment 17 Connectedness and supportive relationships edit A common aspect of recovery is said to be the presence of others who believe in the person s potential to recover 18 19 and who stand by them According to Relational Cultural Theory as developed by Jean Baker Miller recovery requires mutuality and empathy in relationships 18 The theory states this requires relationships that embody respect authenticity and emotional availability 18 20 Supportive relationships can also be made safer through predictability and avoiding shaming and violence 20 18 21 While mental health professionals can offer a particular limited kind of relationship and help foster hope relationships with friends family and the community are said to often be of wider and longer term importance 22 Case managers can play the role of connecting recovering persons to services that the recovering person may have limited access to such as food stamps and medical care 23 24 Others who have experienced similar difficulties and are on a journey of recovery can also play a role in establishing community and combating a recovering person s feelings of isolation 18 An example of a recovery approach that fosters a sense of community to combat feelings of isolation is the safe house or transitional housing model of rehabilitation This approach supports victims of trauma through a community centered transitional housing method that provides social services healthcare and psychological support to navigate through and past experiences Safe houses aim to support survivors on account of their individual needs and can effectively rehabilitate those recovering from issues such as sexual violence and drug addiction without criminalization 25 Additionally safe houses provide a comfortable space where survivors can be listened to and uplifted through compassion 26 In practice this can be accomplished through one on one interviews with other recovering persons 18 engaging in communal story circles 18 or peer led support groups 27 Those who share the same values and outlooks more generally not just in the area of mental health may also be particularly important It is said that one way relationships based on being helped can actually be devaluing and potentially re traumatizing 21 and that reciprocal relationships and mutual support networks can be of more value to self esteem and recovery 14 18 20 19 Hope edit Finding and nurturing hope has been described as a key to recovery It is said to include not just optimism but a sustainable belief in oneself and a willingness to persevere through uncertainty and setbacks Hope may start at a certain turning point or emerge gradually as a small and fragile feeling and may fluctuate with despair It is said to involve trusting and risking disappointment failure and further hurt 14 Identity edit Recovery of a durable sense of self if it had been lost or taken away has been proposed as an important element A research review suggested that people sometimes achieve this by positive withdrawal regulating social involvement and negotiating public space in order to only move towards others in a way that feels safe yet meaningful and nurturing personal psychological space that allows room for developing understanding and a broad sense of self interests spirituality etc It was suggested that the process is usually greatly facilitated by experiences of interpersonal acceptance mutuality and a sense of social belonging and is often challenging in the face of the typical barrage of overt and covert negative messages that come from the broader social context 28 Being able to move on can mean having to cope with feelings of loss which may include despair and anger When an individual is ready for change a process of grieving is initiated It may require accepting past suffering and lost opportunities or lost time 14 Formation of healthy coping strategies and meaningful internal schema edit The development of personal coping strategies including self management or self help is said to be an important element This can involve making use of medication or psychotherapy if the patient is fully informed and listened to including about adverse effects and about which methods fit with the consumer s life and their journey of recovery Developing coping and problem solving skills to manage individual traits and problem issues which may or may not be seen as symptoms of mental disorder may require a person becoming their own expert in order to identify key stress points and possible crisis points and to understand and develop personal ways of responding and coping 14 Developing a sense of meaning and overall purpose is said to be important for sustaining the recovery process This may involve recovering or developing a social or work role It may also involve renewing finding or developing a guiding philosophy religion politics or culture 14 From a postmodern perspective this can be seen as developing a narrative 29 Empowerment and building a secure base edit Building a positive culture of healing is essential in the recovery approach Since recovering is a long process a strong supportive network can be helpful 30 Appropriate housing a sufficient income freedom from violence and adequate access to health care have also been proposed 31 as important tools to empowering someone and increasing her his self sufficiency 18 23 21 32 Empowerment and self determination are said to be important to recovery for reducing the social and psychological effects of stress and trauma Women s Empowerment Theory suggests that recovery from mental illness substance abuse and trauma requires helping survivors understand their rights so they can increase their capacity to make autonomous choices 18 32 This can mean develop the confidence for independent assertive decision making and help seeking which translates into proper medication and active self care practices Achieving social inclusion and overcoming challenging social stigma and prejudice about mental distress disorder difference is also an important part of empowerment Advocates of Women s Empowerment Theory argue it is important to recognize that a recovering person s view of self is perpetuated by stereotypes and combating those narratives 18 Empowerment according to this logic requires reframing a survivor s view of self and the world 18 19 In practice empowerment and building a secure base require mutually supportive relationships between survivors and service providers identifying a survivor s existing strengths and an awareness of the survivor s trauma and cultural context 21 18 19 27 Concepts of recovery editVaried definitions edit What constitutes recovery or a recovery model is a matter of ongoing debate both in theory and in practice In general professionalized clinical models tend to focus on improvement in particular symptoms and functions and on the role of treatments while consumer survivor models tend to put more emphasis on peer support empowerment and real world personal experience 33 34 35 Recovery from the medical approach is defined by a dwindling of symptoms whereas recovery in the peer approach may still involve symptoms but the person feels they are gaining more control over their life 36 Similarly recovery may be viewed in terms of a social model of disability rather than a medical model of disability and there may be differences in the acceptance of diagnostic labels and treatments 14 A review of research suggested that writers on recovery are rarely explicit about which of the various concepts they are employing The reviewers classified the approaches they found in to broadly rehabilitation perspectives which they defined as being focused on life and meaning within the context of enduring disability and clinical perspectives which focused on observable remission of symptoms and restoration of functioning 37 From a psychiatric rehabilitation perspective a number of additional qualities of the recovery process have been suggested including that it can occur without professional intervention but requires people who believe in and stand by the person in recovery does not depend on believing certain theories about the cause of conditions can be said to occur even if symptoms later re occur but does change the frequency and duration of symptoms requires recovery from the consequences of a psychiatric condition as well as the condition itself is not linear but does tend to take place as a series of small steps does not mean the person was never really psychiatrically disabled focuses on wellness not illness and on consumer choice 38 A consensus statement on mental health recovery from US agencies that involved some consumer input defined recovery as a journey of healing and transformation enabling a person with a mental health problem to live a meaningful life in a community of his or her choice while striving to achieve his or her full potential Ten fundamental components were elucidated all assuming that the person continues to be a consumer or to have a mental disability 39 Conferences have been held on the importance of the elusive concept from the perspectives of consumers and psychiatrists 40 One approach to recovery known as the Tidal Model focuses on the continuous process of change inherent in all people conveying the meaning of experiences through water metaphors Crisis is seen as involving opportunity creativity is valued and different domains are explored such as sense of security personal narrative and relationships Initially developed by mental health nurses along with service users Tidal is a particular model that has been specifically researched Based on a discrete set of values the Ten Commitments it emphasizes the importance of each person s own voice resourcefulness and wisdom Since 1999 projects based on the Tidal Model have been established in several countries For many recovery has a political as well as personal implication where to recover is to find meaning challenge prejudice including diagnostic labels in some cases perhaps to be a bad non compliant patient and refuse to accept the indoctrination of the system to reclaim a chosen life and place within society and to validate the self 41 Recovery can thus be viewed as one manifestation of empowerment Such an empowerment model may emphasize that conditions are not necessarily permanent that other people have recovered who can be role models and share experiences and that symptoms can be understood as expressions of distress related to emotions and other people One such model from the US National Empowerment Center proposes a number of principles of how people recover and seeks to identify the characteristics of people in recovery 42 In general recovery may be seen as more of a philosophy or attitude than a specific model requiring fundamentally that we regain personal power and a valued place in our communities Sometimes we need services to support us to get there 43 Recovery from substance dependence edit Particular kinds of recovery models have been adopted in drug rehabilitation services While interventions in this area have tended to focus on harm reduction particularly through substitute prescribing or alternatively requiring total abstinence recovery approaches have emphasized the need to simultaneously address the whole of people s lives and to encourage aspirations while promoting equal access and opportunities within society Some examples of harm reduction services include overdose reversal medications such as Narcan substance testing kits supplies for sterile injections HIV HBV and HCV at home testing equipment and trauma informed care in the form of group therapy community building events case management and rental assistance services 44 The purpose of this model is to rehabilitate those experiencing addiction in a holistic way rather than through law enforcement and criminal justice based intervention which can fail to address victims circumstances on a need by need basis 25 From the perspective of services the work may include helping people with developing the skills to prevent relapse into further illegal drug taking rebuilding broken relationships or forging new ones actively engaging in meaningful activities and taking steps to build a home and provide for themselves and their families Milestones could be as simple as gaining weight re establishing relationships with friends or building self esteem What is key is that recovery is sustained 45 Key to the philosophy of the recovery movement is the aim for an equal relationship between Experts by Profession and Experts by Experience 46 Trauma Informed Recovery edit Trauma Informed care is a philosophy for recovery that combines the conditions and needs of people recovering from mental illness and or substance abuse into one framework This framework combines all of the elements of the Recovery Approach and adds an awareness of trauma Advocates of trauma informed care argue the principles and strategies should be applied to individuals experiencing mental illness substance dependence and trauma as these three often occur simultaneously or as result of each other 47 19 23 21 27 The paradigms surrounding trauma informed care began to shift in 1998 and 1999 In 1998 the Center for Mental Health Services the Center for Substance Abuse Treatment and the Center for Substance Abuse Prevention collaborated to fund 14 sites to develop integrated services in order to address the interrelated effects of violence mental health and substance abuse 47 In 1999 the National Association of State Mental Health Program Directors passed a resolution recognizing the impact of violence and trauma 47 and developed a toolkit of resources for the implementation of trauma services in state mental health agencies 19 Trauma informed care has been supported in academia as well Scholars claim that neglecting the role of trauma in a person s story can interfere with recovery in the form of misdiagnosis inaccurate treatment or retraumatization 23 21 18 27 47 20 Some principles of trauma informed care include validating survivor experiences and resiliency aiming to increase a survivor s control over her his their recovery creating atmospheres for recovery that embody consistency and confidentiality minimizing the possibilities of triggering past trauma and integrating survivors recovering persons in service evaluation 27 19 18 21 In practice trauma informed care has shown to be most effective when every participant in a service providing context to be committed to following these principles 23 21 In addition these principles can apply to all steps of the recovery process within a service providing context including outreach and engagement screening advocacy crisis intervention and resource coordination 19 27 18 20 21 The overall goal in trauma informed care is facilitating healing and empowerment using strengths based empowerment practices and a comprehensive array of services that integrate co occurring disorders and the multitude of needs a recovering person might have such as drug treatment housing relationship building and parenting support 23 21 27 These approaches are in contrast to traditional care systems Advocates of trauma informed care critique traditional service delivery systems such as standard hospitals for failing to understand the role of trauma in a patients life 47 Traditional service delivery systems are also critiqued for isolating the conditions of a recovering person and not addressing conditions such as substance abuse and mental illness simultaneously as part of one source 23 47 Specific practices in traditional service delivery systems such as unnecessary procedures undressing for examinations involuntary hospitalizations crowded emergency rooms and limited time for providers to meet with patients have all been critiqued as insensitive to persons recovering from trauma and consequential mental illness or substance abuse 21 20 47 Limited resources and time in the United States healthcare system can make the implementation of trauma informed care difficult 20 There are other challenges to trauma informed care besides limits in the United States healthcare system that can make trauma informed care ineffective for treating persons recovering from mental illness or substance dependence Advocates of trauma informed care argue implementation requires a strong commitment from leadership in an agency to train staff members to be trauma aware but this training can be costly and time consuming 47 27 19 Trauma informed care and trauma also have contested definitions and can be hard to measure in a real world service setting 19 Another barrier to trauma informed care is the necessity of screening for histories of trauma 19 21 20 47 27 While agencies need to screen for histories of trauma in order to give the best care there can be feelings of shame and fear of being invalidated that can prevent a recovering person from disclosing their personal experiences 20 Concerns edit Some concerns have been raised about a recovery approach in theory and in practice These include suggestions that it is an old concept only happens to very few people represents an irresponsible fad happens only as a result of active treatment implies a cure can only be implemented with new resources adds to the burden of already stretched providers is neither reimbursable nor evidence based devalues the role of professional intervention and increases providers exposure to risk and liability 48 Other criticisms focused on practical implementation by service providers include that the recovery model can be manipulated by officials to serve various political and financial interests including withdrawing services and pushing people out before they re ready that it is becoming a new orthodoxy or bandwagon that neglects the empowerment aspects and structural problems of societies and primarily represents a middle class experience that it hides the continued dominance of a medical model and that it potentially increases social exclusion and marginalizes those who don t fit into a recovery narrative 49 There have been specific tensions between recovery models and evidence based practice models in the transformation of US mental health services based on the recommendations of the New Freedom Commission on Mental Health 50 The commission s emphasis on recovery has been interpreted by some critics as saying that everyone can fully recover through sheer will power and therefore as giving false hope and implicitly blaming those who may be unable to recover 51 However the critics have themselves been charged with undermining consumer rights and failing to recognize that the model is intended to support a person in their personal journey rather than expecting a given outcome and that it relates to social and political support and empowerment as well as the individual 52 Various stages of resistance to recovery approaches have been identified amongst staff in traditional services starting with Our people are much sicker than yours They won t be able to recover and ending in Our doctors will never agree to this However ways to harness the energy of this perceived resistance and use it to move forward have been proposed 53 In addition staff training materials have been developed by various organisations for example by the National Empowerment Center 54 55 56 57 Some positives and negatives of recovery models were highlighted in a study of a community mental health service for people diagnosed with schizophrenia It was concluded that while the approach may be a useful corrective to the usual style of case management at least when genuinely chosen and shaped by each unique individual on the ground serious social institutional and personal difficulties made it essential that there be sufficient ongoing effective support with stress management and coping in daily life Cultural biases and uncertainties were also noted in the North American model of recovery in practice reflecting views about the sorts of contributions and lifestyles that should be considered valuable or acceptable 58 Assessment edit A number of standardized questionnaires and assessments have been developed to try to assess aspects of an individual s recovery journey These include the Milestones of Recovery MOR Scale Recovery Enhancing Environment REE measure Recovery Measurement Tool RMT Recovery Oriented System Indicators ROSI Measure 59 Stages of Recovery Instrument STORI 60 and numerous related instruments 61 The data collection systems and terminology used by services and funders are said to be typically incompatible with recovery frameworks so methods of adapting them have been developed 62 It has also been argued that the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders and to some extent any system of categorical classification of mental disorders uses definitions and terminology that are inconsistent with a recovery model leading to suggestions that the next version the DSM V requires greater sensitivity to cultural issues and gender to recognize the need for others to change as well as just those singled out for a diagnosis of disorder and to adopt a dimensional approach to assessment that better captures individuality and does not erroneously imply excess psychopathology or chronicity 63 National policies and implementation editUnited States and Canada edit The New Freedom Commission on Mental Health has proposed to transform the mental health system in the US by shifting the paradigm of care from traditional medical psychiatric treatment toward the concept of recovery and the American Psychiatric Association has endorsed a recovery model from a psychiatric services perspective 64 65 The US Department of Health and Human Services reports developing national and state initiatives to empower consumers and support recovery with specific committees planning to launch nationwide pro recovery anti stigma education campaigns develop and synthesize recovery policies train consumers in carrying out evaluations of mental health systems and help further the development of peer run services 66 Mental Health service directors and planners are providing guidance to help state services implement recovery approaches 67 Some US states such as California see the California Mental Health Services Act Wisconsin and Ohio already report redesigning their mental health systems to stress recovery model values like hope healing empowerment social connectedness human rights and recovery oriented services 68 At least some parts of the Canadian Mental Health Association such as the Ontario region have adopted recovery as a guiding principle for reforming and developing the mental health system 31 New Zealand and Australia edit Since 1998 all mental health services in New Zealand have been required by government policy to use a recovery approach 69 70 and mental health professionals are expected to demonstrate competence in the recovery model 71 Australia s National Mental Health Plan 2003 2008 states that services should adopt a recovery orientation 72 although there is variation between Australian states and territories in the level of knowledge commitment and implementation 73 UK and Ireland edit In 2005 the National Institute for Mental Health in England NIMHE endorsed a recovery model as a possible guiding principle of mental health service provision and public education 74 The National Health Service is implementing a recovery approach in at least some regions and has developed a new professional role of Support Time and Recovery Worker 75 Centre for Mental Health issued a 2008 policy paper proposing that the recovery approach is an idea whose time has come 49 76 and in partnership with the NHS Confederation Mental Health Network and support and funding from the Department of Health manages the Implementing Recovery through Organisational Change ImROC nationwide project that aims to put recovery at the heart of mental health services in the UK 77 The Scottish Executive has included the promotion and support of recovery as one of its four key mental health aims and funded a Scottish Recovery Network to facilitate this 78 A 2006 review of nursing in Scotland recommended a recovery approach as the model for mental health nursing care and intervention 79 The Mental Health Commission of Ireland reports that its guiding documents place the service user at the core and emphasize an individual s personal journey towards recovery 80 See also editAddiction recovery groups Anti psychiatry Clinical psychology Capability approach Celebrate Recovery Critical Psychiatry Critical Psychiatry Network Emotions Anonymous Hearing Voices Movement Hearing Voices Network GROW Mark Ragins Mentalism discrimination Physical medicine and rehabilitation Recovery coaching Recovery International Rethinking Madness Self help groups for mental health Shared decision making Social firm Social psychiatry Social work Soteria psychiatric treatment Therapeutic community United States Psychiatric Rehabilitation Association Wellness Recovery Action PlanReferences edit Elm Jessica H L Lewis Jordan P Walters Karina L Self Jen M 1 October 2016 I m in this world for a reason Resilience and recovery among American Indian and Alaska Native two spirit women Journal of Lesbian Studies 20 3 4 352 371 doi 10 1080 10894160 2016 1152813 PMC 6424359 PMID 27254761 Anthony William Toward a Vision of Recovery PDF Center for Psychiatric Rehabilitation Archived from the original PDF on 2016 12 30 Retrieved 2015 05 26 Recovery Definition amp Components Hamilton County Mental Health amp Recovery Services Board Retrieved 23 April 2018 Resolution on APA Endorsement Of The Concept Of Recovery For People With Serious Mental Illness PDF APA Archived from the original PDF on December 22 2012 Coffeng Jennifer K Boot Cecile R L Duijts Saskia F A Twisk Jos W R van Mechelen Willem Hendriksen Ingrid J M 2014 12 26 Jepson Ruth ed Effectiveness of a Worksite Social amp Physical Environment Intervention on Need for Recovery Physical Activity and Relaxation Results of a Randomized Controlled Trial PLOS ONE 9 12 e114860 Bibcode 2014PLoSO 9k4860C doi 10 1371 journal pone 0114860 ISSN 1932 6203 PMC 4277283 PMID 25542039 van Bilsen Henck P J G 2016 Lessons to be learned from the oldest community psychiatric service in the world Geel in Belgium PDF BJPsych Bulletin 40 4 207 211 doi 10 1192 pb bp 115 051631 PMC 4967781 PMID 27512591 Retrieved March 19 2023 The remarkable story of Geel 700 years of community based mental health care Stevis Gridneff Matina Ryckewaert Koba 2023 Radical Experiment in Mental Health Care Tested Over Centuries New York Times archived from the original on 2023 04 25 History of the Recovery Movement a b Office of the Surgeon General and various United States Government agencies 1999 Mental Health A report of the Surgeon General Section 10 Overview of Recovery Ramon S Healy B Renouf N March 2007 Recovery from mental illness as an emergent concept and practice in Australia and the UK Int J Soc Psychiatry 53 2 108 22 doi 10 1177 0020764006075018 PMID 17472085 S2CID 25732602 Deegan PE 1988 Recovery The lived experience of rehabilitation PDF Psychosocial Rehabilitation Journal 11 4 4 doi 10 1037 h0099565 Archived from the original PDF on 2007 09 26 Jacobson N and Curtis L 2000 Recovery as Policy in Mental Health Services Strategies Emerging from the States Psychosocial Rehabilitation Journal Spring a b c d e f g Repper J amp Perkins R 2006 Social Inclusion and Recovery A Model for Mental Health Practice Bailliere Tindall UK ISBN 0 7020 2601 8 Recovery principles Hopkins Andrew What helps Scottish Recovery Network SRN Archived from the original on 2020 10 31 Retrieved 2017 03 30 Leamy M Bird V J Le Boutillier C Williams J amp Slade M 2011 A conceptual framework for personal recovery in mental health systematic review and narrative synthesis British Journal of Psychiatry 199 445 452 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Francis East Jean Roll Susan J 2015 Women Poverty and Trauma An Empowerment Practice Approach Figure 1 Social Work 60 4 279 286 doi 10 1093 sw swv030 ISSN 0037 8046 PMID 26489348 a b c d e f g h i j k Hopper Elizabeth K Bassuk Ellen L Olivet Jeffrey 2010 04 07 Shelter from the Storm Trauma Informed Care in Homelessness Services Settings 2009 08 20 2009 09 28 2010 03 22 The Open Health Services and Policy Journal 3 2 80 100 doi 10 2174 1874924001003020080 ISSN 1874 9240 S2CID 10319681 a b c d e f g h i Reeves Elizabeth 2015 09 02 A Synthesis of the Literature on Trauma Informed Care Issues in Mental Health Nursing 36 9 698 709 doi 10 3109 01612840 2015 1025319 ISSN 0161 2840 PMID 26440873 S2CID 36312879 a b c d e f g h i j k l Elliott Denise E Bjelajac Paula Fallot Roger D Markoff Laurie S Reed Beth Glover 2005 Trauma informed or trauma denied Principles and implementation of trauma informed services for women Journal of Community Psychology 33 4 461 477 doi 10 1002 jcop 20063 ISSN 0090 4392 S2CID 145560079 Hack Thyself 2012 Recovery Is Impossible Without Friends Archived 2016 10 04 at the Wayback Machine a b c d e f g Heslin Kevin C Andersen Ronald M Gelberg Lillian 2003 01 01 Case Management And Access To Services For Homeless Women Journal of Health Care for the Poor and Underserved 14 1 34 51 doi 10 1177 1049208902238822 ISSN 1049 2089 PMID 12613067 Gibbs Deborah A Hardison Walters Jennifer L Lutnick Alexandra Miller Shari Kluckman Marianne July 2015 Services to domestic minor victims of sex trafficking Opportunities for engagement and support Children and Youth Services Review 54 1 7 doi 10 1016 j childyouth 2015 04 003 a b The Politicization of Safety Critical Perspectives on Domestic Violence Responses Vol 10 NYU Press 2019 ISBN 978 1 4798 0564 8 JSTOR j ctv12fw97b Harrington Carol November 2019 Neo liberal Subjectivity Self branding and My Rape Story YouTube Videos Critical Sociology 45 7 8 1181 1194 doi 10 1177 0896920518778107 ISSN 0896 9205 S2CID 149930006 a b c d e f g h i Huntington Nicholas Moses Dawn Jahn Veysey Bonita M 2005 Developing and implementing a comprehensive approach to serving women with co occurring disorders and histories of trauma Journal of Community Psychology 33 4 395 410 doi 10 1002 jcop 20059 ISSN 0090 4392 Sells DJ Stayner DA Davidson L 2004 Recovering the self in schizophrenia an integrative review of qualitative studies PDF Psychiatr Q 75 1 87 97 doi 10 1023 B PSAQ 0000007563 17236 97 PMID 14992305 S2CID 28364835 Gold E August 2007 From narrative wreckage to islands of clarity stories of recovery from psychosis Can Fam Physician 53 8 1271 5 PMC 1949240 PMID 17872833 Jacobson Nora Greenley Dianne 2001 What Is Recovery A Conceptual Model and Explication Psychiatric Services 52 4 482 485 doi 10 1176 appi ps 52 4 482 ISSN 1075 2730 PMID 11274493 S2CID 2624547 a b Canadian Mental Health Association Ontario 2003 Recovery rediscovered Implications for the Ontario mental health system dead link a b Gibbs Deborah A Hardison Walters Jennifer L Lutnick Alexandra Miller Shari Kluckman Marianne 2015 Services to domestic minor victims of sex trafficking Opportunities for engagement and support Children and Youth Services Review 54 1 7 doi 10 1016 j childyouth 2015 04 003 Bellack AS July 2006 Scientific and consumer models of recovery in schizophrenia concordance contrasts and implications Schizophr Bull 32 3 432 42 doi 10 1093 schbul sbj044 PMC 2632241 PMID 16461575 Secker J Membrey H Grove B Seebohm Patience June 2002 Recovering from Illness or Recovering your Life Implications of Clinical Versus Social Models of Recovery from Mental Health Problems for Employment Support Services Disability amp Society 17 4 403 418 doi 10 1080 09687590220140340 S2CID 144793249 Carlos Pratt Kenneth J Gill Nora M Barrett Kevin K Hull Melissa M Roberts 2002 Psychiatric Rehabilitation Stuart Simon Robertson Tansey Louise Quayle Ethel 20 September 2016 What we talk about when we talk about recovery a systematic review and best fit framework synthesis of qualitative literature PDF Journal of Mental Health 26 3 291 304 doi 10 1080 09638237 2016 1222056 hdl 20 500 11820 84053d0a 9b25 47ff 9bdb 963bf6c70312 PMID 27649767 S2CID 4426778 Davidson L Lawless MS Leary F November 2005 Concepts of recovery competing or complementary Curr Opin Psychiatry 18 6 664 7 doi 10 1097 01 yco 0000184418 29082 0e PMID 16639093 S2CID 28715315 Anthony W A Cohen M Farkas M amp Gagne C 2002 Psychiatric Rehabilitation 2nd edition Boston Boston University Center for Psychiatric Rehabilitation ISBN 1 878512 11 0 US Dept of Health and Human Services and SAMHSA Center for Mental Health Services 2004 National Consensus Statement on Mental Health Recovery Archived 2008 09 07 at the Wayback Machine Recovery Movement Gains Influence In Mental Health Programs Psychiatric News 38 1 10 January 3 2003 Archived from the original on August 2 2003 Chamberlin J Confessions of a non compliant patient National Empowerment Center Fisher D 2005 Empowerment Model of Recovery From Severe Mental Illness Medscape Psychiatry amp Mental Health 10 1 Doug Banks Jim Burdett Vicki Burnett Deb Christensen Susie Crooks Elva Edwards Stewart Fenton Seulata Fui Maria Glanville Sonja Goldsack Alex Handiside Chris Hansen Anne Helm Iwa Natana Mary O Hagan Lina Samu Ana Sokratov Te Wera Te Kotua John Tovey Debra Wells and Ranui Wilson 2004 Our Lives in 2014 A recovery vision from people with experience of mental illness Archived 2008 10 16 at the Wayback Machine Published with the assistance of the New Zealand Mental Health Commission MacMaster S A 2004 Harm Reduction A New Perspective on Substance Abuse Services Social Work 49 3 356 363 doi 10 1093 sw 49 3 353 PMID 15281690 Retrieved 2023 04 27 The Road to Recovery A New Approach to Tackling Scotland s Drug Problem by the Scottish Government May 29 2008 Drew Emma The Whole Person Recovery Handbook a b c d e f g h i Harris Maxine Fallot Roger D 2001 Envisioning a trauma informed service system A vital paradigm shift New Directions for Mental Health Services 2001 89 3 22 doi 10 1002 yd 23320018903 PMID 11291260 Davidson L O Connell M Tondora J Styron T Kangas K May 2006 The top ten concerns about recovery encountered in mental health system transformation Psychiatric Services 57 5 640 5 doi 10 1176 appi ps 57 5 640 PMID 16675756 a b George C 2008 Recovery approach in mental health is idea whose time has come Archived 2020 08 03 at the Wayback Machine Psychminded co uk Retrieved on 29 Aug 2008 Daly R July 6 2007 Tensions Complicate Efforts to Transform MH Systems Psychiatric News 42 13 14 15 doi 10 1176 pn 42 13 0014 Torrey 2003 Treatment Advocacy Center Statement Newswire Retrieved on Aug 12 2008 McLean A 2003 Recovering Consumers and a Broken Mental Health System in the United States Ongoing Challenges for Consumers Survivors and the New Freedom Commission on Mental Health Part II Impact of Managed Care and Continuing Challenges Archived 2016 11 07 at the Wayback Machine International Journal of Psychosocial Rehabilitation 8 58 70 Lori Ashcraft William A Anthony 2008 Addressing Resistance to Recovery Strategies for working with staff resistant to change Behavioral Healthcare Tools for Transformation March Ahern L Fisher D Personal Assistance in Community Existence A Recovery Guide Lawrence Mass National Empowerment Center 1999 Ahern L Fisher D PACE Recovery Curriculum Lawrence Mass National Empowerment Center 2001 Fisher D Chamberlin J PACE Recovery Peer Training Recovery Curriculum Lawrence Mass National Empowerment Center 2004 Ahern L Fisher D April 2001 Recovery at your own PACE Personal Assistance in Community existence J Psychosoc Nurs Ment Health Serv 39 4 22 32 doi 10 3928 0279 3695 20010401 11 PMID 11324174 Neely Laurenzo amp Myers 2010 Culture Stress and Recovery from Schizophrenia Lessons from the Field for Global Mental Health Culture Medicine and Psychiatry 2010 September 34 3 500 528 Website of the National Association of State Mental Health Directors Tools In Development Measuring Recovery at the Individual Program and System Levels Archived 2007 04 17 at the Wayback Machine Andresen R Caputi P Oades L 2006 Stages of recovery instrument development of a measure of recovery from serious mental illness Australian amp New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry 40 11 12 972 80 doi 10 1111 j 1440 1614 2006 01921 x PMID 17054565 Theodora Campbell Orde M P A Judi Chamberlin Jenneth Carpenter M S W amp H Stephen Leff Ph D 2005 Measuring the Promise A Compendium of Recovery Measures Volume II Archived 2014 01 04 at the Wayback Machine Lori Ashcraft William A Anthony 2007 Data Collection With Recovery In Mind Involve service users as much as possible Archived 2010 08 13 at the Wayback Machine Behavioral Healthcare Tools for Transformation September Michael T Compton 2007 Recovery Patients Families Communities Conference Report Medscape Psychiatry amp Mental Health October 11 14 2007 President s New Freedom Commission on Mental Health 2003 Achieving the Promise Transforming Mental Health Care in America Archived 2008 07 05 at the Wayback Machine Sharfstein S 2005 Recovery Model Will Strengthen Psychiatrist Patient Relationship Psychiatric News 40 20 3 Archived from the original on 2008 03 25 US Dept of Health and Human Sciences Consumer Directed Transformation to a Recovery Based Mental Health System Archived 2006 11 30 at the Wayback Machine NASMHPD NTAC 2004 Implementing Recovery based Care Tangible Guidance for SMHAs Archived 2007 09 29 at the Wayback Machine Jacobson N Greenley D April 2001 What is recovery A conceptual model and explication Psychiatric Services 52 4 482 5 doi 10 1176 appi ps 52 4 482 PMID 11274493 Mary O Hagan 2004 Recovery in New Zealand Lessons for Australia PDF Australian e Journal for the Advancement of Mental Health 3 1 Archived from the original PDF on 2007 08 31 New Zealand Mental Health Commission website Archived 1998 02 14 at the Wayback Machine Mental Health Commission 2002 Recovery Competencies for New Zealand Mental Health Workers Archived 2008 04 14 at the Wayback Machine Australian Government National Mental Health Plan 2003 2008 Archived 2008 08 28 at the Wayback Machine Rickwood Debra 2004 Recovery in Australia Slowly but surely PDF Australian e Journal for the Advancement of Mental Health 3 1 8 10 doi 10 5172 jamh 3 1 8 S2CID 72560206 Archived from the original PDF on 2007 08 31 NIMHE 2005 Guiding Statement on Recovery permanent dead link Support time recovery STR workers London Development Centre 12 February 2007 Archived from the original on 29 April 2007 Shepherd G Boardman J Slade M 2008 1 Centre for Mental Health What is recovery Archived from the original on 2012 06 26 Retrieved 2012 05 30 Hopkins Andrew Contents Acknowledgements About this project amp Chapter summaries Scottish Recovery Network Archived from the original on 2007 05 13 Retrieved 2007 05 09 Scottish Executive 2006 Rights Relationships and Recovery The Report of the National Review of Mental Health Nursing in Scotland Higgins Agnes 2008 A Recovery Approach within the Irish Mental Health Services A Framework for Development PDF Mental Health Commission Archived from the original PDF on 2016 07 05 Retrieved 2016 02 04 Further reading editKarasaki et al 2013 The Place of Volition in Addiction Differing Approaches and their Implications for Policy and Service Provision External links editThe Strengths Model A Recovery Oriented Approach to Mental Health Services St Vincent s Hospital Melbourne 2014 NASW Practice Snapshot The Mental Health Recovery Model Recovery as a Journey of the Heart PDF A Critical Exploration of Social Inequities in the Mental Health Recovery Literature National Resource Center on Psychiatric Advance Directives Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Recovery model amp oldid 1190001752, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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