Recovery: Getting your life back - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 12
About This Presentation
Title:

Recovery: Getting your life back

Description:

Improve people's whole experience of using services tailor what we do around ... Help people to manage their own problems become experts in their own self-care ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:79
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 13
Provided by: rach101
Category:
Tags: back | getting | hagan | life | recovery

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Recovery: Getting your life back


1
Recovery Getting your life back
  • Miles Rinaldi
  • Head of Recovery and Social Inclusion

2
The policy context
  • Beyond the treatment of illness
  • Choice, control, social inclusion, personal
    responsibility core goals of NHS modernisation
  • Improve peoples whole experience of using
    services tailor what we do around the wishes,
    concerns and convenience of those whom we serve
  • Help people to manage their own problems become
    experts in their own self-care
  • Positively promote health and well-being
  • Maximise life chances
  • Promote social inclusion and citizenship
  • Central to developing recovery-focused services

3
  • Independence, Well-being and Choice (2005) the
    vision guiding the future of social care
  • the principle that everyone in society has a
    positive contribution to make to that society and
    that they should have a right to control their
    own lives. Our vision is to ensure that these
    values will drive the way we provide social
    care.
  • Breaking Down Barriers (National Director for
    Mental Health 2007) vision for the development of
    mental health services
  • Employment, housing and a strong social network
    are as important to a persons mental health as
    the treatment they receive we have to continue
    to improve community care and break down the
    barriers than can prevent people from rebuilding
    their lives go beyond traditional clinical care
    and help patients back into mainstream society.
  • Darzi (2007) Healthcare for London A Framework
    for Action areas of mental health care
    requiring particular improvement
  • Service users should be put in control of their
    recovery and social inclusion should be
    supported.
  • Chief Nursing Officers Review of Mental Health
    Nursing (2006)
  • Mental health nursing should incorporate the
    principles of the Recovery Approach into every
    aspect of their practice.

4
The journey from institutionalisation to recovery
-focused practice and self-directed support
(adapted from Robin Murray-Neill and Ruth Allen)

5
The experience of mental health problems a
catastrophic an life changing experience
  • Strange and often frightening symptoms
  • Prejudice, discrimination, exclusion
  • Loss of confidence and self-belief
  • Feel very alone and very frightened
  • Out of the blue your job has gone, with it any
    financial security you may have had. At a
    stroke, you have no purpose in life, and no
    contact with other people. You find yourself
    totally isolated from the rest of the world. No
    one telephones you. Much less writes. No-one
    seems to care if youre alive or dead . (Bird,
    2001)
  • Last month I was a regular mum walking down the
    street with my kids in their push-chair now Im
    just a mental patient.
  • They are all very nice to me here, but I dont
    think they understand what a big deal this
    schizophrenia is for me.
  • (South West London Local User Surveys 2006)

6
Challenge rebuilding a meaningful, valued and
satisfying life
  • Recovery involves
  • building a new sense of self, meaning and
    purpose
  • growing within and beyond what has happened to
    you
  • a deeply personal, unique process of changing
    ones attitudes, values, feelings, goals, skills
    and rolesThe development of new meaning and
    purpose in ones life as one grows beyond the
    catastrophic effects of mental illness
  • (Anthony 1993)
  • Ideas about recovery born not of learned
    academics but of people who had themselves
    experienced the challenge of living with mental
    health problems

7
  • Recovery is about
  • living hopefully
  • taking control over your problems and your life
  • pursuing your dreams and ambitions
  • relatives, carers, people close to the individual
    also face the challenge of recovery for
    themselves and for their loved one
  • Recovery is not
  • the same as cure
  • a professional intervention an individual
    journey
  • an end point an ongoing process of
    accommodating and moving beyond what has happened
    to you
  • restricted to adults of working age older
    people, children, people with addictions
    problems, learning disabilities, people in
    forensic services )
  • Not unique to people with mental health problems
    a common human experience

8
  • Recovery requires reframing the treatment
    enterprisethe issue is what role treatment plays
    in recovery. (Davidson et al, 2006)
  • Away from the person in our services needs
    defined in terms of what we offer
  • Towards the person in their life and how what
    we do helps (or hinders) the person in living the
    life they want to live
  • Treatment one of many possible means to an end
    living the life you want to lead not an end in
    itself
  • Key question Do our services help or hinder
    people in their recovery journey?

9
2008 National Service User Survey
Overall involvement in decisions about treatment
and care scores
Overall rating of care received from the Trust in
the last 12 months scores
  • But how good are we at helping people to rebuild
    their lives?

10
What helps people in their recovery journey?
OPPORTUNITY accessing the roles, relationships
and activities that are important to you I
dont want a CPN, I want a life. (Rose, 2001)
Taking back CONTROL Recovery means I try to
stay in the drivers seat of my life. I dont
let my illness run me. Over the years I have
worked hard to become an expert in my own
self-care (Deegan, 1993)
HOPE and hope inspiring relationships The
turning point in my life was where I started to
get hope. Dr. Charles believed that I could. And
Rev Goodwin believed that I could. Certain
people believed that I could and held that
belief even when I didnt believe in myself.
(Donna in Vincent 1999)
Adapted from Repper Perkins (2003)
11
A different approach to professionalism
  • Traditionally assumed that the expert
    professional has access to a body of knowledge
    that cannot be understood by non-experts.
    Therefore it is our job to tell people what they
    should do.
  • Traditionally we think about compliance
    getting people to do what we think is best for
    them
  • Compliance interventions are often designed to
    increase clients behavioral conformity to a
    practitioners point of view of optimal
    treatment.
  • (Deegan and Drake, 2006)
  • A change in our view of professionalism ... on
    tap not on top putting our expertise at the
    disposal of those who be able to make use of it
    ... We need to see ourselves ascarriers of
    technologies that we may want to use at times,
    just like architects, plumbers and hairdressers.
    (OHagan, 2007)

12
Promoting recovery, facilitating social
inclusionNot an add on to existing ways of
doing things but a fundamental change in vision,
values and practice
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com