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Listening to voice hearers

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Listening to voice hearers. / Sapey, Robert; Bullimore, Peter.
In: Journal of Social Work, Vol. 13, No. 6, 11.2013, p. 616-632.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Sapey, R & Bullimore, P 2013, 'Listening to voice hearers', Journal of Social Work, vol. 13, no. 6, pp. 616-632. https://doi.org/10.1177/1468017312475278

APA

Sapey, R., & Bullimore, P. (2013). Listening to voice hearers. Journal of Social Work, 13(6), 616-632. https://doi.org/10.1177/1468017312475278

Vancouver

Sapey R, Bullimore P. Listening to voice hearers. Journal of Social Work. 2013 Nov;13(6):616-632. Epub 2013 Feb 21. doi: 10.1177/1468017312475278

Author

Sapey, Robert ; Bullimore, Peter. / Listening to voice hearers. In: Journal of Social Work. 2013 ; Vol. 13, No. 6. pp. 616-632.

Bibtex

@article{1720e598503d466999b812ac44dfc4a1,
title = "Listening to voice hearers",
abstract = "Summary: This article considers what the Hearing Voices Network can offer to mental health social work. It combines an extensive literature review of voice hearing by Bob Sapey and the expertise by experience of Peter Bullimore who runs a peer support group for voice hearers.Findings: The re-framing of auditory hallucinations as voice hearing has significantly changed the way many voice hearers have been able to understand their experience. This new approach to working with voices was developed at the University of Maastricht, principally by social psychiatrist Marius Romme. By moving away from biological explanations of brain disease to psychological understandings of emotions, Romme and his colleagues have found ways of helping people cope with voices, rather than trying to get rid of them through medication. This has led to a network of voice hearing groups throughout the world. There is much of what happens in these groups and within the social psychiatric responses known as the Maastricht approach that can be practiced by social workers.Applications: The Maastricht approach to working with voices challenges the basis of pharmacological responses to psychosis and moves beyond anti-psychiatry by offering positive alternatives to the current biomedical treatment of schizophrenia. This approach can be undertaken by experts by experience and mental health professionals. We describe these approaches and argue that in adopting them, social workers can help voice hearers cope both with the content of their voices and the stigmatising responses to being diagnosed with schizophrenia.",
keywords = "Maastricht approach, mental health , social work , social work practice , critical social work , trauma , voice hearing",
author = "Robert Sapey and Peter Bullimore",
year = "2013",
month = nov,
doi = "10.1177/1468017312475278",
language = "English",
volume = "13",
pages = "616--632",
journal = "Journal of Social Work",
issn = "1741-296X",
publisher = "SAGE Publications Ltd",
number = "6",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Listening to voice hearers

AU - Sapey, Robert

AU - Bullimore, Peter

PY - 2013/11

Y1 - 2013/11

N2 - Summary: This article considers what the Hearing Voices Network can offer to mental health social work. It combines an extensive literature review of voice hearing by Bob Sapey and the expertise by experience of Peter Bullimore who runs a peer support group for voice hearers.Findings: The re-framing of auditory hallucinations as voice hearing has significantly changed the way many voice hearers have been able to understand their experience. This new approach to working with voices was developed at the University of Maastricht, principally by social psychiatrist Marius Romme. By moving away from biological explanations of brain disease to psychological understandings of emotions, Romme and his colleagues have found ways of helping people cope with voices, rather than trying to get rid of them through medication. This has led to a network of voice hearing groups throughout the world. There is much of what happens in these groups and within the social psychiatric responses known as the Maastricht approach that can be practiced by social workers.Applications: The Maastricht approach to working with voices challenges the basis of pharmacological responses to psychosis and moves beyond anti-psychiatry by offering positive alternatives to the current biomedical treatment of schizophrenia. This approach can be undertaken by experts by experience and mental health professionals. We describe these approaches and argue that in adopting them, social workers can help voice hearers cope both with the content of their voices and the stigmatising responses to being diagnosed with schizophrenia.

AB - Summary: This article considers what the Hearing Voices Network can offer to mental health social work. It combines an extensive literature review of voice hearing by Bob Sapey and the expertise by experience of Peter Bullimore who runs a peer support group for voice hearers.Findings: The re-framing of auditory hallucinations as voice hearing has significantly changed the way many voice hearers have been able to understand their experience. This new approach to working with voices was developed at the University of Maastricht, principally by social psychiatrist Marius Romme. By moving away from biological explanations of brain disease to psychological understandings of emotions, Romme and his colleagues have found ways of helping people cope with voices, rather than trying to get rid of them through medication. This has led to a network of voice hearing groups throughout the world. There is much of what happens in these groups and within the social psychiatric responses known as the Maastricht approach that can be practiced by social workers.Applications: The Maastricht approach to working with voices challenges the basis of pharmacological responses to psychosis and moves beyond anti-psychiatry by offering positive alternatives to the current biomedical treatment of schizophrenia. This approach can be undertaken by experts by experience and mental health professionals. We describe these approaches and argue that in adopting them, social workers can help voice hearers cope both with the content of their voices and the stigmatising responses to being diagnosed with schizophrenia.

KW - Maastricht approach

KW - mental health

KW - social work

KW - social work practice

KW - critical social work

KW - trauma

KW - voice hearing

U2 - 10.1177/1468017312475278

DO - 10.1177/1468017312475278

M3 - Journal article

VL - 13

SP - 616

EP - 632

JO - Journal of Social Work

JF - Journal of Social Work

SN - 1741-296X

IS - 6

ER -