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A qualitative study of the experiences of moving on from a non-residential Democratic Therapeutic Community

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A qualitative study of the experiences of moving on from a non-residential Democratic Therapeutic Community. / Hewitson, Nina.
Lancaster University, 2021. 180 p.

Research output: ThesisDoctoral Thesis

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Hewitson N. A qualitative study of the experiences of moving on from a non-residential Democratic Therapeutic Community. Lancaster University, 2021. 180 p. doi: 10.17635/lancaster/thesis/1472

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@phdthesis{7abf474164c741abbafdb7f30611b342,
title = "A qualitative study of the experiences of moving on from a non-residential Democratic Therapeutic Community",
abstract = "This thesis explores experiences of stigma towards individuals with a diagnosisBorderline Personality Disorder and consider approaches to mitigate this. It examined the experiences of individuals with difficulties that can be understood as personality disorders who had attended a Democratic Therapeutic Community, focusing on what factors helped and or hindered the maintenance of the positive therapeutic changes achieved during DTC treatment.A narrative literature review was conducted with the aim of exploring the existing literature relating to stigma and prejudice towards people with a diagnosis of BPD, focusing on how mental health professionals think about and behave towards individuals with this diagnosis and the clinical implications of these attitudes and behaviours. The Power Threat Meaning Framework (PTMF) was discussed as an alternative to psychiatric diagnosis.A qualitative research study aimed to understand the medium-term factors that helped or hindered the maintenance and continuation of positive change after the end of day DTC treatment. It examined the experiences of individuals who had completed day DTC programmes and the subsequent follow-on group between six months to two years prior to taking part in the research, who felt they had an overall beneficial experience in the DTC. Interpretativephenomenological analysis (IPA) analysis was used. Six participants completed one-to-one semistructured interviews. Four superordinate themes emerged: An Atmosphere of Belonging, Hope versus Struggle, Support, and Empowerment though Understanding. This study was the first to explore the experiences of individuals following discharge from non-residential day DTCs.",
author = "Nina Hewitson",
year = "2021",
doi = "10.17635/lancaster/thesis/1472",
language = "English",
publisher = "Lancaster University",
school = "Lancaster University",

}

RIS

TY - BOOK

T1 - A qualitative study of the experiences of moving on from a non-residential Democratic Therapeutic Community

AU - Hewitson, Nina

PY - 2021

Y1 - 2021

N2 - This thesis explores experiences of stigma towards individuals with a diagnosisBorderline Personality Disorder and consider approaches to mitigate this. It examined the experiences of individuals with difficulties that can be understood as personality disorders who had attended a Democratic Therapeutic Community, focusing on what factors helped and or hindered the maintenance of the positive therapeutic changes achieved during DTC treatment.A narrative literature review was conducted with the aim of exploring the existing literature relating to stigma and prejudice towards people with a diagnosis of BPD, focusing on how mental health professionals think about and behave towards individuals with this diagnosis and the clinical implications of these attitudes and behaviours. The Power Threat Meaning Framework (PTMF) was discussed as an alternative to psychiatric diagnosis.A qualitative research study aimed to understand the medium-term factors that helped or hindered the maintenance and continuation of positive change after the end of day DTC treatment. It examined the experiences of individuals who had completed day DTC programmes and the subsequent follow-on group between six months to two years prior to taking part in the research, who felt they had an overall beneficial experience in the DTC. Interpretativephenomenological analysis (IPA) analysis was used. Six participants completed one-to-one semistructured interviews. Four superordinate themes emerged: An Atmosphere of Belonging, Hope versus Struggle, Support, and Empowerment though Understanding. This study was the first to explore the experiences of individuals following discharge from non-residential day DTCs.

AB - This thesis explores experiences of stigma towards individuals with a diagnosisBorderline Personality Disorder and consider approaches to mitigate this. It examined the experiences of individuals with difficulties that can be understood as personality disorders who had attended a Democratic Therapeutic Community, focusing on what factors helped and or hindered the maintenance of the positive therapeutic changes achieved during DTC treatment.A narrative literature review was conducted with the aim of exploring the existing literature relating to stigma and prejudice towards people with a diagnosis of BPD, focusing on how mental health professionals think about and behave towards individuals with this diagnosis and the clinical implications of these attitudes and behaviours. The Power Threat Meaning Framework (PTMF) was discussed as an alternative to psychiatric diagnosis.A qualitative research study aimed to understand the medium-term factors that helped or hindered the maintenance and continuation of positive change after the end of day DTC treatment. It examined the experiences of individuals who had completed day DTC programmes and the subsequent follow-on group between six months to two years prior to taking part in the research, who felt they had an overall beneficial experience in the DTC. Interpretativephenomenological analysis (IPA) analysis was used. Six participants completed one-to-one semistructured interviews. Four superordinate themes emerged: An Atmosphere of Belonging, Hope versus Struggle, Support, and Empowerment though Understanding. This study was the first to explore the experiences of individuals following discharge from non-residential day DTCs.

U2 - 10.17635/lancaster/thesis/1472

DO - 10.17635/lancaster/thesis/1472

M3 - Doctoral Thesis

PB - Lancaster University

ER -