Exploring the Evidence for the Paradigms of Recovery and Social Work Converging in Mental Health Service Delivery Worldwide: Reflections from an Irish Case Study

Author:

Swords Calvin1ORCID,Houston Stan2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Applied Social Studies, National University of Ireland, W23F2H6 Maynooth, Ireland

2. School of Social Sciences, Education and Social Work, Queen’s University Belfast, Belfast BT71HL, UK

Abstract

Recovery within mental health service delivery is no longer a new consideration in the Western world. However, it is well-documented how challenging its implementation and translation to practice and reality have been in contemporary mental health systems. In conjunction with this, mental health social work is continuously being challenged and debated in relation to its role, responsibilities, and identity in service delivery. This is largely the consequence of the continued dominance of the biomedical model in relation to service delivery. Yet, if we critically reflect on the philosophy and ethos of recovery, it becomes very clear that social work should be the key profession to lead the development and improvement of recovery-orientated services across the globe. To illustrate this argument, the authors first draw on empirical research undertaken by the lead author within the Republic of Ireland on how recovery is socially constructed within mental health service delivery. The key stakeholders involved in the Irish study included professionals, service users, family members, and policy influencers, with participants taking part in semi-structured interviews. Secondly, the authors reflect on some of the findings from this Irish study, presenting an argument for not only a more significant role for social work in an Irish mental health context but also making comparisons from an international perspective. This includes exploring the role of critical social work traditions for supporting services to move beyond a philosophy of recovery that has, to date, overlooked the intersectional injustices and inequalities faced by hard-to-reach populations. Finally, the authors conclude by providing some possibilities for how the paradigms of social work and recovery can and should continue to converge towards each other, opening a space for social work to become a more dominant perspective within mental health systems worldwide.

Funder

Ph.D. scholarship received from the Irish Research Council, Postgraduate Scholarship

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

Reference53 articles.

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2. Swords, C. (2019). Recovery and Co-Production: Understanding the Diverging Paradigms and Potential Implications for Social Workers. Ir. Soc. Work., 2019.

3. Exploring the Concept of Recovery in Irish Mental Health Services: A Case Study of Perspectives within an Inter-Professional Team;Swords;Ir. J. Appl. Soc. Stud.,2020

4. Social Recovery: A New Interpretation to Recovery-Orientated Services—A Critical Literature Review;Norton;J. Ment. Health Train. Educ. Pract.,2020

5. The Rediscovered Concept of Recovery in Mental Illness: A Multicountry Comparison of Policy and Practice;Ramon;Int. J. Ment. Health,2009

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