Author:
Roberts Glenn,Wolfson Paul
Abstract
‘Recovery’ is usually taken as broadly equivalent to ‘getting back to normal’ or ‘cure’, and by these standards few people with severe mental illness recover. At the heart of the growing interest in recovery is a radical redefinition of what recovery means to those with severe mental health problems. Redefinition of recovery as a process of personal discovery, of how to live (and to live well) with enduring symptoms and vulnerabilities opens the possibility of recovery to all. The ‘recovery movement’ argues that this reconceptualisation is personally empowering, raising realistic hope for a better life alongside whatever remains of illness and vulnerability. This paper explores the background and defining features of the international recovery movement, its influence and impact on contemporary psychiatric practice, and steps towards developing recovery-based practice and services.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health
Reference55 articles.
1. Discovering hope for recovery from a British perspective;Allott;Canadian Journal of Community Mental Health,2003
2. Depression
Cited by
216 articles.
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