Consumer perspectives and mental health reform movements in the United States: 30 years of first-person accounts

The present qualitative study examined 69 published first-person accounts written by adults diagnosed with schizophrenia from 1979-2010 within the historical context of the four major mental health movements in the United States. Content analysis techniques were used to identify major topics and ove...

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Veröffentlicht in:Psychiatric rehabilitation journal 2013-09, Vol.36 (3), p.187-194
Hauptverfasser: Gumber, Shinakee, Stein, Catherine H
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container_title Psychiatric rehabilitation journal
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creator Gumber, Shinakee
Stein, Catherine H
description The present qualitative study examined 69 published first-person accounts written by adults diagnosed with schizophrenia from 1979-2010 within the historical context of the four major mental health movements in the United States. Content analysis techniques were used to identify major topics and overarching content categories in the first-person accounts written over the 30-year period. The frequency of topics in each content category was examined as a function of the decade and corresponding mental health movement in which accounts were published. Five overarching content categories emerged reflecting authors' conceptualizations of schizophrenia, their experiences with psychiatric hospitalization, medications, coping with social stigma, and achieving and maintaining valued social roles. Two summary categories emerged reflecting authors explicit views about what helped and what did not help in their experience of living with schizophrenia. With the exception of social stigma, frequency of topics within content categories did not change as a function of decade and corresponding mental health movement. Despite changes in mental health policies, treatment, and systems of care, the overall lack of significant differences in the content of first-person accounts across the 30-year period suggests an enduring nature to the experiences of individuals coping with schizophrenia. Implications of present findings for research and practice are discussed.
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source MEDLINE; EBSCOhost APA PsycARTICLES
subjects Adult
Attitude to Health
Chi-Square Distribution
Consumer Attitudes
Content analysis
Cost of Illness
Health care policy
Health Care Reform
Health Care Reform - trends
Health Policy - trends
Hospitalization
Human
Humans
Mental Health
Mental health care
Mental Health Services - trends
Periodicals as Topic
Personal Narratives as Topic
Qualitative Research
Schizophrenia
Schizophrenia - rehabilitation
Schizophrenia - therapy
Social Stigma
Stigma
Survivors - psychology
United States
title Consumer perspectives and mental health reform movements in the United States: 30 years of first-person accounts
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