Final published version
Licence: CC BY: Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License
Research output: Contribution to Journal/Magazine › Review article › peer-review
Research output: Contribution to Journal/Magazine › Review article › peer-review
}
TY - JOUR
T1 - Compassion-informed approaches for coping with hearing voices: literature review and narrative synthesis
AU - Leach, H.
AU - Kelly, J.
AU - Parry, S.
PY - 2023/9/30
Y1 - 2023/9/30
N2 - BackgroundCompassion-informed talking therapies have gained increased attention with people who hear voices and practitioners alike. Developing inner kindness can reduce powerful critical voices and self-stigma, thus increasing people’s ability to cope with challenging voice hearing experiences, and potentially increase overall wellbeing.MethodsThe current review aimed to explore how compassion-informed approaches to coping with voice hearing are understood and reported across the existent voice-hearing literature. Academic Search Ultimate, MedLine and PsychINFO databases were searched for suitable papers, using the terms: [“hear* voice*” OR “voice hear*” OR “auditory hallucinat*”] AND compassion*.ResultsFourteen papers were identified for inclusion: six quantitative studies, six qualitative reports, and two theoretical reviews. Included studies host a total sample size of 855 people, representative of clinical and community populations, across adolescence and adulthood. The reviewed research originated from the United Kingdom, Australia, France, Germany, Italy, Ireland, and the United States of America.DiscussionSelf-compassion and building a compassionate alliance with one’s voices can be challenging for many voice hearers to initially embrace. Over time, building a mutually compassionate relationship with one’s voices can help empower the voice hearer by resolving, rather than increasing, inner conflicts, and may increase opportunities to experience the presence of agreeable voices.
AB - BackgroundCompassion-informed talking therapies have gained increased attention with people who hear voices and practitioners alike. Developing inner kindness can reduce powerful critical voices and self-stigma, thus increasing people’s ability to cope with challenging voice hearing experiences, and potentially increase overall wellbeing.MethodsThe current review aimed to explore how compassion-informed approaches to coping with voice hearing are understood and reported across the existent voice-hearing literature. Academic Search Ultimate, MedLine and PsychINFO databases were searched for suitable papers, using the terms: [“hear* voice*” OR “voice hear*” OR “auditory hallucinat*”] AND compassion*.ResultsFourteen papers were identified for inclusion: six quantitative studies, six qualitative reports, and two theoretical reviews. Included studies host a total sample size of 855 people, representative of clinical and community populations, across adolescence and adulthood. The reviewed research originated from the United Kingdom, Australia, France, Germany, Italy, Ireland, and the United States of America.DiscussionSelf-compassion and building a compassionate alliance with one’s voices can be challenging for many voice hearers to initially embrace. Over time, building a mutually compassionate relationship with one’s voices can help empower the voice hearer by resolving, rather than increasing, inner conflicts, and may increase opportunities to experience the presence of agreeable voices.
KW - Hearing voices
KW - compassion-informed approaches
KW - coping
KW - review
KW - narrative
U2 - 10.1080/17522439.2023.2253883
DO - 10.1080/17522439.2023.2253883
M3 - Review article
VL - 16
SP - 325
EP - 335
JO - Psychosis
JF - Psychosis
SN - 1752-2439
IS - 4
ER -