AI Article Synopsis

  • The paper presents the context and foundations of an ongoing practice development project in mental health recovery involving two UK sites.
  • It explores the project’s origins within a recovery community, highlighting the significance of recovery and survivor writing in shaping the research.
  • The discussion includes the philosophical and theoretical frameworks guiding the research, contributing to a commitment to mental health nursing practices centered around recovery as a narrative healing process, with references to a related follow-up project on Writing for Recovery.

Article Abstract

This paper, part one of a two paper report, describes key aspects of the research context of an ongoing practice development project, conducted on two UK sites. The paper begins with a discussion of the project's origins within a community of people working in the recovery paradigm, including the contributory strand of the first author's recovery and survivor writing. The discussion then turns to three inter-related areas within which the research component sits and which provide it with philosophical, theoretical and conceptual coherence. Each area will be unpacked and its significance explained. This will provide a platform for discussing the focus, methodology and methods of the research, and related assumptions governing both data collection and analysis. The paper concludes with a research commitment to a mental health nursing practice allied to recovery as narrative healing. Links are made to the second paper which describes the context and specifics of a Writing for Recovery project for users, survivors and carers. This shares with, and builds on, the overall project's research context and its assumptions.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2850.2012.01922.xDOI Listing

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