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Personal Narratives of Mental Illness: From Hostage to Survivor

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Personal Narratives of Mental Illness: From Hostage to Survivor. / White, Luciana; Staniford, Leanne.
In: Issues in Mental Health Nursing, Vol. 44, No. 4, 03.04.2023, p. 270-281.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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White L, Staniford L. Personal Narratives of Mental Illness: From Hostage to Survivor. Issues in Mental Health Nursing. 2023 Apr 3;44(4):270-281. Epub 2023 Mar 21. doi: 10.1080/01612840.2023.2186142

Author

White, Luciana ; Staniford, Leanne. / Personal Narratives of Mental Illness : From Hostage to Survivor. In: Issues in Mental Health Nursing. 2023 ; Vol. 44, No. 4. pp. 270-281.

Bibtex

@article{cc7e52763ca54e27a7a899e6d839a2d9,
title = "Personal Narratives of Mental Illness: From Hostage to Survivor",
abstract = "This study has delved into personal narratives extracted from online blogs to build a systematic view of mental illness trajectory through the portrayal offered by bloggers. One hundred and thirty-three blogs were reviewed and narrative analysis was used to interpret a final sample of 12 blogs. The results offer two main narratives—the hostage and the survivor—which illustrate, within the context of social and self-stigma, the need for an identity reformulation in order to reach recovery. The two narratives also led to the design of a model for mental illness trajectory (MMIT). The breaking down of mental illness trajectory into phases could be advantageous to promoting tailored interventions for specific stages of recovery. The importance of referring to lived experience when trying to understand and develop better treatments for mental illness has been well established. This study contributes to the growing body of research that includes the voice of the person with mental illness offering not only a vivid portrayal of life with mental health issues but also an understanding of the trajectory to recovery.",
keywords = "Pshychiatric Mental Health, Mental illness, personal narratives",
author = "Luciana White and Leanne Staniford",
year = "2023",
month = apr,
day = "3",
doi = "10.1080/01612840.2023.2186142",
language = "English",
volume = "44",
pages = "270--281",
journal = "Issues in Mental Health Nursing",
issn = "0161-2840",
publisher = "Informa Healthcare",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Personal Narratives of Mental Illness

T2 - From Hostage to Survivor

AU - White, Luciana

AU - Staniford, Leanne

PY - 2023/4/3

Y1 - 2023/4/3

N2 - This study has delved into personal narratives extracted from online blogs to build a systematic view of mental illness trajectory through the portrayal offered by bloggers. One hundred and thirty-three blogs were reviewed and narrative analysis was used to interpret a final sample of 12 blogs. The results offer two main narratives—the hostage and the survivor—which illustrate, within the context of social and self-stigma, the need for an identity reformulation in order to reach recovery. The two narratives also led to the design of a model for mental illness trajectory (MMIT). The breaking down of mental illness trajectory into phases could be advantageous to promoting tailored interventions for specific stages of recovery. The importance of referring to lived experience when trying to understand and develop better treatments for mental illness has been well established. This study contributes to the growing body of research that includes the voice of the person with mental illness offering not only a vivid portrayal of life with mental health issues but also an understanding of the trajectory to recovery.

AB - This study has delved into personal narratives extracted from online blogs to build a systematic view of mental illness trajectory through the portrayal offered by bloggers. One hundred and thirty-three blogs were reviewed and narrative analysis was used to interpret a final sample of 12 blogs. The results offer two main narratives—the hostage and the survivor—which illustrate, within the context of social and self-stigma, the need for an identity reformulation in order to reach recovery. The two narratives also led to the design of a model for mental illness trajectory (MMIT). The breaking down of mental illness trajectory into phases could be advantageous to promoting tailored interventions for specific stages of recovery. The importance of referring to lived experience when trying to understand and develop better treatments for mental illness has been well established. This study contributes to the growing body of research that includes the voice of the person with mental illness offering not only a vivid portrayal of life with mental health issues but also an understanding of the trajectory to recovery.

KW - Pshychiatric Mental Health

KW - Mental illness

KW - personal narratives

U2 - 10.1080/01612840.2023.2186142

DO - 10.1080/01612840.2023.2186142

M3 - Journal article

VL - 44

SP - 270

EP - 281

JO - Issues in Mental Health Nursing

JF - Issues in Mental Health Nursing

SN - 0161-2840

IS - 4

ER -