1 / 22

Recovery: a journey of the he art

Recovery: a journey of the he art. Patrick Mundy Physiotherapist. Learning Outcomes. No Health without Mental health (2011) Principles of Recovery REFOCUS: Model of Recovery Supporting Recovery Physiotherapy and Recovery. No Health without mental health (2011). The Vision:

aboulanger
Télécharger la présentation

Recovery: a journey of the he art

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Recovery: a journey of the heart Patrick Mundy Physiotherapist

  2. Learning Outcomes • No Health without Mental health (2011) • Principles of Recovery • REFOCUS: Model of Recovery • Supporting Recovery • Physiotherapy and Recovery

  3. No Health without mental health (2011) The Vision: • More people will have good mental health • More people with mental health problems will recover • More people with mental health problems will have good physical health • More people will have a positive experience of care and support • Fewer people will suffer avoidable harm • Fewer people will experience stigma and discrimination

  4. Recovery Supporting Organisations • Implementing Recovery organisational change (ImROC) • Recovery colleges • Both for service users and Staff • Courses lead by both a Practitioner teacher and a Peer teacher • Non-clinical • Promoting trusts and organisations to hiring Peer support workers

  5. Clinical Recovery • Evidence based practice and skilful use of interventions • Getting rid of symptoms • Restoring social functioning • “Getting back to normal”

  6. “…. A deeply personal, unique process of changing one’s attitudes, values, feelings, goals, skills &/or roles. It is a way of living a satisfying, hopeful, & contributing life even within the limitations caused by illness. Recovery involves the development of new meaning & purpose in one’s life as one grows beyond the catastrophic effects of mental illness.” (Anthony 1993)

  7. Personal Recovery • Physical, mental and spiritual journey • Spontaneous and Natural • Deeply Personal • Can occur with or with out professional help • Involves growth and setbacks, periods of rapid and little change • Can occur with continuing symptoms • http://youtu.be/jhK-7DkWaKE

  8. Core concepts of Recovery Hope – Sustains motivation and supports expectations of an individually fulfilled life Sense of control – Service users taking control of their own problems, the services they receive and their lives Opportunity – Participation in a wider society. To be valued, to contribute and have access to the opportunities that exist within those communities

  9. Recovery Vs. Rehabilitation The goal of the recovery process is not to become normal. The goal is to embrace the human vocation of becoming more deeply, more fully human. (Deegan, 1995) A person with paraplegia can recover even though the spinal cord has not. Similarly, a person with mental illness can recover even though the illness is not “cured”. (Anthony, 1993) Def: restore (someone) to health or normal life by training and therapy after imprisonment, addiction, or illness (Oxford Dictionary) The process whereby a disabled person is enabled to use their residual abilities to function effectively in as normal a social situation as possible (Bennet 1978) Recovery is what people with disabilities do. Treatment and case management and Rehabilitation are what helpers do to facilitate recovery. (Anthony, 1993)

  10. Stages of Recovery • Moratorium Denial, confusion, hopelessness, identity confusion, self-protective withdrawal • Awareness The first glimmer of hope for a better life, that recovery is possible. Can emerge from within or be triggered by significant other, role model, clinician • Preparation The person resolves to start recovery work, taking stock of personal resources, values, limitations • Rebuilding Forging a more positive identity, setting & striving towards personal goals, reassessing old values • Growth Whether or not symptom-free, can manage illness & stay well (resilience, self-confidence, optimism) Andresen R et al (2003) The experience of recovery from schizophrenia: towards an empirically-validated stage model, Australian and New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry, 37, 586-94

  11. REFOCUS: Model of Recovery Recovery-promoting Relationships • Relationship between staff and service users is central to personal Recovery • Exploring team understanding of Recovery and team values • Skill training in Coaching Working Practices • Understanding values and treatment preferences: Care planning is centred around person 2. Assessing strengths: Focussed on amplifying a person’s strengths and ability 3. Supporting goal-striving: Oriented around personally valued goals and that staff support active goal-striving

  12. Supporting Recovery Download: www.rethink.org/100ways

  13. Recovery-promoting Relationships • Valuing people for who they are – seeing beyond a diagnosis/set of symptoms • “Listening” & believing in the authenticity • Seeing & having confidence in their skills, abilities & potential • Recognising that problems or set backs are part of the recovery process

  14. Recovery-promoting Relationships • Tipping points for successful recovery: • Insights and acceptance in the person being supported • Allowance of risk taking • Co-development of social opportunities and knowledge • Positive relationships with formal services based on good communication • Carers involved in self-recovery and respite Parr H (2009) Carers and supporting recovery, Glasgow: Scottish Recovery Network.

  15. Mental Health Life Coaching • Established from sport and Business • Non-clinical • Defined as a holistic orientation to working with people, to find balance, enjoyment and meaning in their lives as well as improving performance, skills and effectiveness.

  16. Coaching Continued • Goal: Setting clear goals • Reality: Exploring the current situation • Options: Alternative strategies or courses of action • Way forward: What is to be done, when, by whom and the will to do it.

  17. Social Inclusion • Supporting people regain their place in their communities where they live • Restitution – Regaining something that was lost or taken away

  18. Peer Support • Mutual self-help groups • Peer support specialists • Is a role in the mental system for which personal experience of mental illness is a job requirement • Their own lived experience is valued • Act as Role models • Peer run programmes

  19. Physiotherapy and Recovery • Currently no research in the role of Physiotherapy in Recovery • Currently little involvement in Recovery • Is there a place for physiotherapy in Recovery? • Natural Coaches! • Goal-striving practice

  20. Online Recovery Resources • www.rethink.org • www.scottishrecovery.net • www.iop.kcl.ac.uk/recovery • www.researchintorecovery.com

  21. Further Reading/information • Slade, M (2009) 100 ways to support recovery. Rethink Recovery Series Vol. 1. London: Rethink Mental Illness • Bora R, Leaning L, Moores A, Roberts G (2010): Life coaching for mental health recovery: the emerging practice of recovery coaching. Advances in Psychiatric Treatment, Vol 16, 459-467 • Gallwey T (1974), The Inner Game of Tennis. Random house, New York.

More Related