AI Article Synopsis

  • The concept of recovery in mental health emerged in the 1980s, challenging the idea that severe mental illness always leads to decline, as studies showed that individuals can lead meaningful lives post-diagnosis.
  • While recovery principles are being integrated into global mental health policies and practices, there is still debate about whether recovery is truly possible and if it qualifies as an evidence-based practice.
  • The paper proposes a balanced approach that combines evidence-based, value-based, and narrative-based practices to enhance the recovery model while addressing its limitations.

Article Abstract

The concept of recovery entered the lexicon of the mental health services in the 1980s following the publication of a series of studies and personal narratives which demonstrated that the course of mental illness was not always one of inevitable deterioration and that people diagnosed with severe mental illness could reclaim or recover meaningful lives. For a long time, recovery was not thought possible by many family members, service providers and researchers. However globally, specific policy and clinical strategies are being developed to implement recovery principles although key questions remain. In fact, the possibility of recovery is still debated by some. In this paper, we include information about the recovery model and the medical model; we provide evidence for recovery and document changes in mental health practices and policies incorporating recovery as the guiding principle. We also attempt to address the debate as to whether recovery is an evidence based practice. We propose that evidence based practice should be complementary to value-based and narrative-based practices and we suggest an integrative model that maximises the virtues and minimises the weaknesses of each practices (see Figure 1).

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0790966700012180DOI Listing

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