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1.
Community Ment Health J ; 57(6): 1121-1129, 2021 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33191458

ABSTRACT

Since the 1970s, psychiatric care in the western world has undergone fundamental changes known as de-institutionalisation. This has changed the living conditions for people with severe mental illness. The purpose of this study was to investigate the living conditions and utilisation of care and social services for a group of people in Sweden with diagnosis of psychosis over a 10-year period, 2004-2013. During this period, psychiatric care decreased at the same time as interventions from the social services increased. Half of the persons in the studied group did not have any institutional care, that is, neither been hospitalised nor dwelling in supported housing, during the last 5 years, and just over 20% had no contact with either psychiatry or the municipality's social services during the last 2 years of the investigated period.


Subject(s)
Mental Disorders , Psychiatry , Psychotic Disorders , Follow-Up Studies , Housing , Humans , Psychotic Disorders/epidemiology , Social Welfare
2.
Soc Psychiatry Psychiatr Epidemiol ; 54(8): 919-926, 2019 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30631889

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: Persons with severe mental health problems (SMHP) point out financial strain as one of their main problems. De-institutionalisation in welfare countries has aimed at normalisation of their living conditions. The aim of the study was to follow the changes in income and source of income during a 10-year period for persons with a first-time psychosis diagnosis (FTPD). METHODS: Data were gathered from different registers. Data from persons with FTPD were compared to data on the general population. Two groups with different recovery paths were also compared: one group without contact with the mental health services during the last five consecutive years of the 10-year follow-up, and the other with contact with both 24/7 and community-based services during the same period. RESULTS: SMHP led to poverty, even if the financial effects of SMHP were attenuated by welfare interventions. Even a recovery path associated with work did not resolve the inequalities generated by SMHP. CONCLUSIONS: Attention should be paid to the risks of confusing the effects of poverty with symptoms of SMHP and thus pathologizing poverty and its impact on human beings. Adequate interventions should consider to improve the financial situation of persons with SMHP.


Subject(s)
Mental Health Services/statistics & numerical data , Poverty/psychology , Psychotic Disorders/economics , Salaries and Fringe Benefits/statistics & numerical data , Social Welfare/statistics & numerical data , Adult , Female , Follow-Up Studies , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Registries , Socioeconomic Factors
3.
Issues Ment Health Nurs ; 38(7): 578-583, 2017 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28388270

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Although being personal in relationships with service users is commonly described as an important aspect of the way that professionals help people with severe mental problems, this has also been described to bring with it a need to keep a distance and set boundaries. AIMS: This study aims to explore how professionals working in psychiatric care view being personal in their relationships with users. METHOD: Qualitative interviews with 21 professionals working in three outpatient psychiatric units, analyzed through thematic analysis. RESULTS: Being personal in their relationships with users was described as something that participants regarded to be helpful, but that also entails risks. Participants described how they balanced being personal by keeping a distance and maintaining boundaries in their relationships based on their "experience-based knowledge" to counter these risks. While these boundaries seemed to play an important part in the way that they act and behave, they were not seen as fixed, but rather as flexible and dynamic. Boundaries could sometimes be transgressed to the benefit of users. CONCLUSIONS: Being personal was viewed as something that may be helpful to users, but that also entails risks. Although boundaries may be a useful concept for use in balancing these risks, they should be understood as something complex and flexible.


Subject(s)
Ambulatory Care , Attitude of Health Personnel , Professional-Patient Relations , Psychiatric Department, Hospital , Adult , Aged , Female , Humans , Male , Mental Disorders/psychology , Middle Aged , Psychiatric Aides , Qualitative Research
4.
Issues Ment Health Nurs ; 37(11): 820-828, 2016 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27696916

ABSTRACT

Psychotropic drugs, particularly antipsychotic types, are a cornerstone of the treatment of people with psychosis. Despite numerous studies showing that drug treatment with psychotropic drugs initially alleviates psychiatric symptoms, the proportion of people with mental health problems and symptoms that do not follow doctors' prescriptions, thus exhibiting so-called non-adherence, is considerable. Non-adherence is predominantly seen as a clinical feature and as a patient characteristic that is especially due to patients' poor understanding that they are ill. There is also a widespread notion that non-adherence is of great disadvantage to the patient. This article is based on interviews with 19 persons diagnosed with psychosis. It challenges the notion of patients being either adherent or non-adherent to the doctor's orders. The findings show that persons with psychosis are active agents when it comes to adjusting medication. The interviewees created their own strategies to gain power over treatment with psychotropic drugs. The most common strategies were to adjust the doses or take breaks of varying lengths from the medication. These deviations from prescriptions were important to conceal, not only from their own psychiatrists, but from all psychiatric staff.


Subject(s)
Medication Adherence , Psychotic Disorders/drug therapy , Psychotic Disorders/psychology , Psychotropic Drugs/therapeutic use , Adult , Aged , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Patient Participation , Patient Preference , Young Adult
5.
J Ment Health ; 25(3): 267-77, 2016 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27150468

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The relationship with professionals has proved to be important with regard to outcome for persons with severe mental illness (SMI). The understanding of non-helpful relationships is important complementary knowledge to that regarding helpful relationships. AIM: To review the available qualitative research providing knowledge of non-helpful relationships from the perspective of persons with SMI. METHOD: A review of qualitative studies, based on an earlier systematic search, analyzed through thematic analysis. RESULTS: The main themes were "non-helpful professionals", "organization versus relation" and "the consequences of non-helpful relationships with professionals". Examples of professionals described as non-helpful were pessimistic and uncaring professionals who were paternalistic and disrespectful. Discontinuity, insufficient time and coercion were some of the contextual factors described as non-helpful. These sorts of relationships were non-helpful because they hindered helpful relationships from developing and contributed to further suffering, instilling hopelessness and hindering personal growth. CONCLUSIONS: Non-helpful relationships with professionals can be understood as impersonal relationships that contain no space for negotiation of the relationship nor of the support and treatment provided through it. It is important that organizations provide professionals with favorable conditions to negotiate the organizational framework and to treat persons with SMI as whole human beings.


Subject(s)
Attitude of Health Personnel , Dissent and Disputes , Mental Disorders/psychology , Mental Disorders/therapy , Professional-Patient Relations , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Humans , Middle Aged , Patient Participation , Qualitative Research , Young Adult
6.
Community Ment Health J ; 52(6): 731-7, 2016 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26319756

ABSTRACT

During the last decades services to people with severe mental health problems have gone through important changes. Terms as de-, trans-, reinstitutionalisation and dehospitalisation has been used. The objective of the study was to collected data about the changes in a welfare society about the new institutional landscape after the mental hospital area. Data about interventions from social welfare agencies, psychiatric care, and prisons were collected from local and national register as well as data about cause of death and socio-economic status for 1355 persons treated with a diagnosis of psychosis in a Stockholm area 2004-2008. Psychiatric in-patient care and prisons are marginalized. Different interventions in open care touched a very large number of persons. Social welfare agencies play an increasing role in this context. The total institutions have been replaced by a network of micro-institutions sometimes offering help but also control.


Subject(s)
Mental Health Services/organization & administration , Psychotic Disorders/therapy , Social Welfare , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Cause of Death , Female , Hospitalization/statistics & numerical data , Hospitals, Psychiatric/supply & distribution , Humans , Male , Mental Health Services/statistics & numerical data , Middle Aged , Psychotic Disorders/mortality , Socioeconomic Factors , Sweden/epidemiology
7.
Psychiatr Q ; 86(4): 471-95, 2015 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25631156

ABSTRACT

Relationships with professionals have been shown to be helpful to persons with severe mental illness (SMI) in relation to a variety of services. In this article, we aimed to synthesize the available qualitative research to acquire a deepened understanding of what helpful relationships with professionals consists of, from the perspective of persons with SMI. To do this, we created a meta-ethnography of 21 studies, through which ten themes and an overarching interpretation were created. The findings show that helpful relationships with professionals are relationships where the persons with SMI get to spend time with professionals that they know and trust, who gives them access to resources, support, collaboration and valued interpersonal processes, which are allowed to transgress the boundaries of the professional relationship. The overarching interpretation shows that the relationship that persons with SMI form with professionals is a professional relationship as well as an interpersonal relationship. Both these dimensions entail actions and processes that can be helpful to persons with SMI. Therefore, it is important to recognize and acknowledge both the functional roles of service user and service provider, as well as the roles of two persons interacting with each other, in a manner that may go beyond the purview of the traditional professionalism. Furthermore, the helpful components of this relationship are determined by the individual preferences, needs and wishes of persons with SMI.


Subject(s)
Cooperative Behavior , Mental Disorders/psychology , Mental Disorders/therapy , Professional-Patient Relations , Databases, Factual/statistics & numerical data , Female , Humans , Male , Patient Preference , Physician's Role
8.
Int J Soc Psychiatry ; 58(4): 417-24, 2012 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21602221

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The quality of the relationship between professional and user is one of the important factors in the recovery process. However, more knowledge is needed concerning the components of helping relationships and characteristics of the helping professional. The aim of this study was to explore users' experiences of helping relationships with professionals. DATA AND METHODS: This was a grounded theory analysis of 71 qualitative interviews to explore users' experience of helping relationships and their components, in psychiatric care in Sweden. DISCUSSION: Within the three main categories - interpersonal continuity, emotional climate and social interaction - two core themes were found that described vital components of helping relationships: a non-stigmatizing attitude on the part of the professionals and their willingness to do something beyond established routines. CONCLUSIONS: The focus in psychiatric treatment research needs to be broadened. In addition to research on the outcome of particular methods and interventions, the common factors also need to be investigated, above all, what is the effect of the quality of the relationship between user and professional. Greater attention needs to be paid, as well, to how helping respective obstructive relationships in psychiatric services arise, are maintained or are modified.


Subject(s)
Helping Behavior , Patient Satisfaction , Professional-Patient Relations , Psychiatry , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Female , Humans , Interpersonal Relations , Male , Middle Aged , Qualitative Research , Severity of Illness Index , Sweden , Young Adult
9.
Int J Soc Psychiatry ; 55(4): 336-47, 2009 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19553363

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Recovery research often describes recovery from mental illness as a complex individual process. In this article a social perspective on recovery is developed. AIMS: To ascertain which factors people regard as decisive to their own recovery and what makes them beneficial. METHODS: In-depth interviews were conducted with 58 persons in Sweden who had recovered from severe mental illness. Interviews were qualitatively analyzed using grounded theory. RESULTS: Three dimensions of contributing recovery factors were identified. Social relationships emerged as the core category throughout these dimensions. CONCLUSIONS: The results show that recovery processes are social processes in which social relationships play a key role.


Subject(s)
Bipolar Disorder/psychology , Bipolar Disorder/rehabilitation , Interpersonal Relations , Personality Disorders/psychology , Personality Disorders/rehabilitation , Psychotic Disorders/psychology , Psychotic Disorders/rehabilitation , Schizophrenia/rehabilitation , Schizophrenic Psychology , Social Adjustment , Adolescent , Adult , Awareness , Character , Combined Modality Therapy , Culture , Family/psychology , Female , Goals , Hospitalization , Humans , Internal-External Control , Interview, Psychological , Male , Motivation , Psychotherapy , Psychotropic Drugs/therapeutic use , Social Support , Sweden , Young Adult
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