The original online version of this article (Littlechild, B., Smith, A. H., Meredith-Windle, G., Gale, T., Lloyd, M. and Hawley, C. (2013) Recovery Approaches in Mental Health: A Qualitative Evaluation of the Whole Li...The original online version of this article (Littlechild, B., Smith, A. H., Meredith-Windle, G., Gale, T., Lloyd, M. and Hawley, C. (2013) Recovery Approaches in Mental Health: A Qualitative Evaluation of the Whole Life Therapy Programme for Persons with Schizophrenia. Health, 5, 582-587. http://dx.doi.org/10.4236/health.2013.53A077) was published mistakenly with a co-author (who also developed the Whole Life Programme) missing. To reflect the contribution and responsibility of the co-author as well as the affiliations of the authors at the time of the study, we revised authorship and author affiliations of the article.展开更多
The recovery approach within mental health services has in recent years been influential in promoting more active participation from service users concerning their treatment and progress, within a move towards models ...The recovery approach within mental health services has in recent years been influential in promoting more active participation from service users concerning their treatment and progress, within a move towards models of interventions based on social models and ideas of service user empowerment. Although mental health recovery models are often heralded as ideological goals, comparatively little has been documented about the means of achieving these. This article sets out the nature and content of the Whole Life Programme, used within the Hertfordshire NHS Partnership Foundation Trust, and the results of qualitative research into the programme that set out to analyse the impact of its delivery from the perspectives of service users. The research examined the experiences and views of participants receiving treatment several months after the completion of the programme, and also of those who withdrew prematurely, in order to learn from these experiences, adding to our understanding of how one recovery based approach, the Whole Life Manual, can be applied in practice.展开更多
文摘The original online version of this article (Littlechild, B., Smith, A. H., Meredith-Windle, G., Gale, T., Lloyd, M. and Hawley, C. (2013) Recovery Approaches in Mental Health: A Qualitative Evaluation of the Whole Life Therapy Programme for Persons with Schizophrenia. Health, 5, 582-587. http://dx.doi.org/10.4236/health.2013.53A077) was published mistakenly with a co-author (who also developed the Whole Life Programme) missing. To reflect the contribution and responsibility of the co-author as well as the affiliations of the authors at the time of the study, we revised authorship and author affiliations of the article.
文摘The recovery approach within mental health services has in recent years been influential in promoting more active participation from service users concerning their treatment and progress, within a move towards models of interventions based on social models and ideas of service user empowerment. Although mental health recovery models are often heralded as ideological goals, comparatively little has been documented about the means of achieving these. This article sets out the nature and content of the Whole Life Programme, used within the Hertfordshire NHS Partnership Foundation Trust, and the results of qualitative research into the programme that set out to analyse the impact of its delivery from the perspectives of service users. The research examined the experiences and views of participants receiving treatment several months after the completion of the programme, and also of those who withdrew prematurely, in order to learn from these experiences, adding to our understanding of how one recovery based approach, the Whole Life Manual, can be applied in practice.