TY - JOUR
T1 - Exploring 'person-centredness'
T2 - User perspectives on a model of social psychiatry
AU - Williams, Brian
AU - Cattell, Dinah
AU - Greenwood, Mike
AU - LeFevre, Sharon
AU - Murray, Ian
AU - Thomas, Phil
PY - 2001/12/24
Y1 - 2001/12/24
N2 - This paper explores service users' experiences of a 'person-centred' mental health service. We describe the development of a model of social psychiatry that places the emphasis on the experiences of the person within social and political contexts. This establishes the foundations of a 'person-centred' approach, the values of which are described briefly. The results of interviews with 20 people are presented, in which their experiences of the service are explored in detail. These interviews reveal the struggle that lies at the heart of the professional-service user dialectic, which relates to issues of institutional power, roles and responsibility, and which places professional staff in conflict with the very notion of 'person-centredness'. No matter how 'person-centred' a mental health service may strive to be, there remain serious obstacles to the full realization of this approach. Despite this critique, there were many things that were valued by those who used the service. More detailed qualitative studies are required to explicate the complex relationships and paradoxes that emerged.
AB - This paper explores service users' experiences of a 'person-centred' mental health service. We describe the development of a model of social psychiatry that places the emphasis on the experiences of the person within social and political contexts. This establishes the foundations of a 'person-centred' approach, the values of which are described briefly. The results of interviews with 20 people are presented, in which their experiences of the service are explored in detail. These interviews reveal the struggle that lies at the heart of the professional-service user dialectic, which relates to issues of institutional power, roles and responsibility, and which places professional staff in conflict with the very notion of 'person-centredness'. No matter how 'person-centred' a mental health service may strive to be, there remain serious obstacles to the full realization of this approach. Despite this critique, there were many things that were valued by those who used the service. More detailed qualitative studies are required to explicate the complex relationships and paradoxes that emerged.
KW - Person-centred medicine
KW - Qualitative methodology
KW - Rural mental health
KW - Social psychiatry
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U2 - 10.1046/j.1365-2524.1999.00215.x
DO - 10.1046/j.1365-2524.1999.00215.x
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:0033263093
SN - 0966-0410
VL - 8
SP - 475
EP - 482
JO - Health and Social Care in the Community
JF - Health and Social Care in the Community
IS - 1
ER -