poster abstractBackground: Despite recent interest in peer-support workers in recovery-oriented services, little is known about how helping behaviors may affect recovery from severe mental illness (SMI). The current study is a mixed-methods approach to understanding self-motivated helping behaviors and their relationship with recovery outcomes among persons with SMI. Method: Forty-six participants with schizophrenia-spectrum disorders completed a narrative interview and standardized measures of recovery, positive and negative symptoms, hope, patient activation, and illness management. Interviews were coded using modified grounded theory. We compared individuals who (unprompted) mentioned helping behaviors in their interview to those who di...
Background Peer support provides the opportunity for peers with experiential knowledge of a mental ...
Objective: The resource group method for people with severe mental illness might provide a useful fr...
Background: This study aimed to determine whether subjective dimensions of recovery such as empowerm...
The purpose of this dissertation was to explore the helping partnerships that facilitate recovery fr...
grantor: University of Toronto'Objectives'. This study explores domains of recovery in sch...
Only recently has the notion of recovery for people diagnosed with a serious and persistent mental i...
iii Judy Alston, Advisor The purpose of this dissertation was to explore the helping partnerships th...
Item does not contain fulltextPeople with a severe mental illness often have less social support tha...
Recovery is a new concept positing that people with schizophrenia can lead fulfilling, satisfying, a...
Title: Exploring the Meaning of Recovery to Individuals Diagnosed with Severe and Persistent Mental ...
Item does not contain fulltextThis study aims to describe how the Illness Management and Recovery pr...
Recovery in co-occurring mental health and substance use disorders often involves relationships with...
Objective: The resource group method for people with severe mental illness might provide a useful fr...
Background: Peer support (PS) arose alongside the recovery movement in efforts to reform medically-f...
Purpose: This hermeneutic phenomenological study examined the lived experience of persons recoverin...
Background Peer support provides the opportunity for peers with experiential knowledge of a mental ...
Objective: The resource group method for people with severe mental illness might provide a useful fr...
Background: This study aimed to determine whether subjective dimensions of recovery such as empowerm...
The purpose of this dissertation was to explore the helping partnerships that facilitate recovery fr...
grantor: University of Toronto'Objectives'. This study explores domains of recovery in sch...
Only recently has the notion of recovery for people diagnosed with a serious and persistent mental i...
iii Judy Alston, Advisor The purpose of this dissertation was to explore the helping partnerships th...
Item does not contain fulltextPeople with a severe mental illness often have less social support tha...
Recovery is a new concept positing that people with schizophrenia can lead fulfilling, satisfying, a...
Title: Exploring the Meaning of Recovery to Individuals Diagnosed with Severe and Persistent Mental ...
Item does not contain fulltextThis study aims to describe how the Illness Management and Recovery pr...
Recovery in co-occurring mental health and substance use disorders often involves relationships with...
Objective: The resource group method for people with severe mental illness might provide a useful fr...
Background: Peer support (PS) arose alongside the recovery movement in efforts to reform medically-f...
Purpose: This hermeneutic phenomenological study examined the lived experience of persons recoverin...
Background Peer support provides the opportunity for peers with experiential knowledge of a mental ...
Objective: The resource group method for people with severe mental illness might provide a useful fr...
Background: This study aimed to determine whether subjective dimensions of recovery such as empowerm...