2018
DOI: 10.2196/preprints.9934
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Recovery After Psychosis: Qualitative Study of Service User Experiences of Lived Experience Videos on a Recovery-Oriented Website (Preprint)

Abstract: Title: Being inspired that recovery after experiencing psychosis is possible: Consumers' experiences of engaging with video-based lived experience through a recovery-oriented website

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“…Only two systematic reviews have included aspects of hedonic well-being (Rennick-Egglestone et al, 2019b;Drewniak et al, 2020). Focusing on health recovery narratives, a systematic review by Rennick-Egglestone et al (2019a) identified two qualitative studies showing that recovery narratives about eating disorder (Thomas et al, 2006) as well about psychosis (Williams et al, 2018) have the potential to increase hope and decrease psychological distress. Similar effects of patient narratives on optimistic feelings were also reported by another qualitative study on health recovery narratives for a broad variety of psychological disorders (Rennick-Egglestone et al, 2019b) as well as a qualitative study on the role of patient experiences in health-decision making (Entwistle et al, 2011).…”
Section: Well-being Related E Ects Of Narratives In Patient Informationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Only two systematic reviews have included aspects of hedonic well-being (Rennick-Egglestone et al, 2019b;Drewniak et al, 2020). Focusing on health recovery narratives, a systematic review by Rennick-Egglestone et al (2019a) identified two qualitative studies showing that recovery narratives about eating disorder (Thomas et al, 2006) as well about psychosis (Williams et al, 2018) have the potential to increase hope and decrease psychological distress. Similar effects of patient narratives on optimistic feelings were also reported by another qualitative study on health recovery narratives for a broad variety of psychological disorders (Rennick-Egglestone et al, 2019b) as well as a qualitative study on the role of patient experiences in health-decision making (Entwistle et al, 2011).…”
Section: Well-being Related E Ects Of Narratives In Patient Informationmentioning
confidence: 99%