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Provider and user perspectives on long-term recovery in England: How do we know when we are done?

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNChapter

Published

Standard

Provider and user perspectives on long-term recovery in England: How do we know when we are done? / Klein, Maike; Hill, John.
Long-Term Recovery from Substance Use: European Perspectives. ed. / Sarah Galvani; Ali Roy; Amanda Clayson. Bristol: Policy Press, 2022. p. 53-64.

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNChapter

Harvard

Klein, M & Hill, J 2022, Provider and user perspectives on long-term recovery in England: How do we know when we are done? in S Galvani, A Roy & A Clayson (eds), Long-Term Recovery from Substance Use: European Perspectives. Policy Press, Bristol, pp. 53-64. https://doi.org/10.1332/policypress/9781447358169.003.0005

APA

Klein, M., & Hill, J. (2022). Provider and user perspectives on long-term recovery in England: How do we know when we are done? In S. Galvani, A. Roy, & A. Clayson (Eds.), Long-Term Recovery from Substance Use: European Perspectives (pp. 53-64). Policy Press. https://doi.org/10.1332/policypress/9781447358169.003.0005

Vancouver

Klein M, Hill J. Provider and user perspectives on long-term recovery in England: How do we know when we are done? In Galvani S, Roy A, Clayson A, editors, Long-Term Recovery from Substance Use: European Perspectives. Bristol: Policy Press. 2022. p. 53-64 doi: 10.1332/policypress/9781447358169.003.0005

Author

Klein, Maike ; Hill, John. / Provider and user perspectives on long-term recovery in England : How do we know when we are done?. Long-Term Recovery from Substance Use: European Perspectives. editor / Sarah Galvani ; Ali Roy ; Amanda Clayson. Bristol : Policy Press, 2022. pp. 53-64

Bibtex

@inbook{72dbf4a40b5a4e6f8a9915016c3fcac5,
title = "Provider and user perspectives on long-term recovery in England: How do we know when we are done?",
abstract = "This chapter demonstrates the dynamic, non-linear, and complex trajectories involved in the journey towards long-term recovery from substance misuse. It begins by discussing some of the challenges in identifying and analysing long-term recovery. As has become evident, objectifying recovery as an outcome variable hinders us from identifying the processes of long-term recovery, a phenomenon in which the lines between wellness (that is, recovery) and pathology (that is, substance misuse) become blurry. The chapter then presents two real-life examples of people with lived experience of long-term recovery, offering clinical reflections based on practice experience in the UK. Finally, it offers recommendations for future research and a way forward that is more sensitive to the needs of people in long-term recovery.",
author = "Maike Klein and John Hill",
year = "2022",
month = jan,
day = "14",
doi = "10.1332/policypress/9781447358169.003.0005",
language = "English",
isbn = "9781447358176",
pages = "53--64",
editor = "Sarah Galvani and Ali Roy and Amanda Clayson",
booktitle = "Long-Term Recovery from Substance Use",
publisher = "Policy Press",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Provider and user perspectives on long-term recovery in England

T2 - How do we know when we are done?

AU - Klein, Maike

AU - Hill, John

PY - 2022/1/14

Y1 - 2022/1/14

N2 - This chapter demonstrates the dynamic, non-linear, and complex trajectories involved in the journey towards long-term recovery from substance misuse. It begins by discussing some of the challenges in identifying and analysing long-term recovery. As has become evident, objectifying recovery as an outcome variable hinders us from identifying the processes of long-term recovery, a phenomenon in which the lines between wellness (that is, recovery) and pathology (that is, substance misuse) become blurry. The chapter then presents two real-life examples of people with lived experience of long-term recovery, offering clinical reflections based on practice experience in the UK. Finally, it offers recommendations for future research and a way forward that is more sensitive to the needs of people in long-term recovery.

AB - This chapter demonstrates the dynamic, non-linear, and complex trajectories involved in the journey towards long-term recovery from substance misuse. It begins by discussing some of the challenges in identifying and analysing long-term recovery. As has become evident, objectifying recovery as an outcome variable hinders us from identifying the processes of long-term recovery, a phenomenon in which the lines between wellness (that is, recovery) and pathology (that is, substance misuse) become blurry. The chapter then presents two real-life examples of people with lived experience of long-term recovery, offering clinical reflections based on practice experience in the UK. Finally, it offers recommendations for future research and a way forward that is more sensitive to the needs of people in long-term recovery.

U2 - 10.1332/policypress/9781447358169.003.0005

DO - 10.1332/policypress/9781447358169.003.0005

M3 - Chapter

SN - 9781447358176

SP - 53

EP - 64

BT - Long-Term Recovery from Substance Use

A2 - Galvani, Sarah

A2 - Roy, Ali

A2 - Clayson, Amanda

PB - Policy Press

CY - Bristol

ER -