Affiliation:
1. School of Nursing and Midwifery La Trobe. University Bundoora Victoria Australia
2. Violet Vines Marshman Centre for Rural Health Research, La Trobe Rural Health School Latrobe University Bendigo Victoria Australia
3. School of Health and Biomedical Sciences Nursing RMIT University Bundoora Victoria Australia
4. La Trobe Rural Health School Latrobe University Bendigo Victoria Australia
Abstract
Accessible SummaryWhat is known on the subject?
There is evidence that social isolation and loneliness is more prevalent in people living with mental illness than in the general population.
People living with mental illness frequently experience stigma, discrimination, rejection, repeated psychiatric admissions, low self‐esteem, low self‐efficacy, and increased symptoms of paranoia, depression, and anxiety.
There is evidence of common interventions that can be used to improve loneliness and social isolation such as psychosocial skills training and cognitive group therapy.
What the paper adds to existing knowledge?
This paper offers a comprehensive assessment of the evidence between mental illness, loneliness, and recovery.
The results suggest that people living with mental illness experience elevated levels of social isolation and loneliness leading to poor recovery and quality of life.
Social deprivation, social integration and romantic loneliness are related to loneliness, poor recovery, and reduced quality of life.
A sense of belonging, ability to trust and hope are important aspects of improved loneliness, quality of life and recovery.
What are the implications for practice?
The existing culture in mental health nursing practice needs to be examined to address loneliness in people living with mental illness and its impact on recovery.
Existing tools to research loneliness do not consider dimensions in loneliness experience as reflected in the literature.
Practice needs to demonstrate an integrated approach to recovery, optimal service delivery and augmentation of evidence‐based clinical practice to improve individual's loneliness, social circumstances, and relationships.
Practice needs to demonstrate nursing knowledge in caring for people living with mental illness experiencing loneliness.
Further longitudinal research is required to clearly understand the relationship between loneliness, mental illness, and recovery.
AbstractIntroductionTo our knowledge, there are no previous reviews on the impact of loneliness experienced by people aged 18–65, who are living with mental illness and their recovery experience.Aim/QuestionTo explore the experience and impact of loneliness in people living with mental illness during recovery.MethodAn integrative review.ResultsA total of 17 papers met the inclusion criteria. The search was conducted using four electronic databases: MEDLINE, CINAHL, Scopus and PsycINFO. Across these 17 papers, participants were most commonly, diagnosed with schizophrenia or psychotic disorders and recruited from community mental health services.DiscussionThe review revealed loneliness to be substantial in people living with mental illness and that loneliness affected their recovery, and their quality of life. The review identified many factors that contribute to loneliness including unemployment, financial strain, social deprivation, group housing, internalized stigma and mental illness symptoms. Individual factors such as social/community integration and social network size as well as an inability to trust, a sense of not belonging, hopelessness and lack of romance were also evident. Interventions targeting social functioning skills and social connectedness were found to improve social isolation and loneliness.Implications for PracticeIt is vital for mental health nursing practice to employ an approach integrating physical health as well as social recovery needs, optimal service delivery and augmentation of evidence‐based clinical practice to improve loneliness, recovery, and quality of life.
Subject
Pshychiatric Mental Health
Cited by
7 articles.
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