2005
DOI: 10.1037/0735-7028.36.5.480
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Recovery in Serious Mental Illness: A New Wine or Just a New Bottle?

Abstract: The notion of recovery has become a dominant force in mental health policy, evident in reports of the Surgeon General and President's New Freedom Commission. In both reports, recovery is stipulated as the overarching goal of care and foundation for reforms at state and local levels. Little consensus exists regarding the nature of recovery in mental illness, however, or about the most effective ways to promote it. The authors offer a conceptual framework for distinguishing between various uses of the term, prov… Show more

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Cited by 363 publications
(310 citation statements)
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References 43 publications
(90 reference statements)
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“…This implies that adaptation should be considered on the basis of QoL scores on a time by level pattern referring to a desirable endpoint [35]. Recovery takes place when the patients have been restored (at least partially) to the same state they had prior to first experiencing the condition [36].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This implies that adaptation should be considered on the basis of QoL scores on a time by level pattern referring to a desirable endpoint [35]. Recovery takes place when the patients have been restored (at least partially) to the same state they had prior to first experiencing the condition [36].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This unprecedented advance in US policy is reflective of an increasing global interest in recovery as the expectation for people living with mental illness. It remains the case at this time, however, that there is little consensus on what recovery means in relation to mental illness or what is to be entailed in transforming mental health services to promote it (Davidson, O'Connell, Tondora, Staeheli, & Evans, 2005;Davidson, O'Connell, Tondora, Styron, & Kangas, 2006). We consider these aims to be of sufficient urgency and import to warrant dissemination of admittedly preliminary efforts to tease apart the various and at times contradictory aspects of recovery and recovery-oriented practice appearing increasingly in the literature (e.g., Andreasen, Carpenter, Kane, Lasser, Marder & Weinberger, 2005;Corrigan, Salzer & Ralph, 2004;Kelly & Gamble, 2005;Liberman & Kopelowicz, 2005;Resnick, Fontana, Lehman & Rosenheck, 2005;Roberts & Wolfson, 2004).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The reasons for these findings are likely multifaceted, but the findings do point to a need for more education and intervention if the recovery movement is to expand to hospital-based care. The mental health field has spent considerable effort defining, conceptualizing, and measuring recovery (8)(9)(10)(11).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%