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The development of a community gym for people with mental health problems: Influences on psychological accessibility

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The development of a community gym for people with mental health problems: Influences on psychological accessibility. / Raine, Pamela M.; Truman, Carole; Southerst, A.
In: Journal of Mental Health, Vol. 11, No. 1, 02.2002, p. 43-53.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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Raine PM, Truman C, Southerst A. The development of a community gym for people with mental health problems: Influences on psychological accessibility. Journal of Mental Health. 2002 Feb;11(1):43-53. doi: 10.1080/096382301200041452

Author

Raine, Pamela M. ; Truman, Carole ; Southerst, A. / The development of a community gym for people with mental health problems: Influences on psychological accessibility. In: Journal of Mental Health. 2002 ; Vol. 11, No. 1. pp. 43-53.

Bibtex

@article{4f75b17eda884519a475fe80ce93ea9c,
title = "The development of a community gym for people with mental health problems: Influences on psychological accessibility",
abstract = "In this paper we explore the ways in which one innovative mental health service has attempted to address the issue of psychological accessibility and 'safety' for its users. Drawing upon an evaluation of a community-based exercise facility for people with mental health problems, and using a qualitative research approach, we explore the views of users, service providers and referral agencies to draw out those aspects of the service, which influence accessibility. Our findings emphasise the importance of the facility's non-institutional appearance, its community location, and the perceived (physical and psychological) 'distance' from medically based mental health services. meaningful to service users and socially valued (and therefore non-stigmatising). Crucial to reducing any potential psychological 'risk' involved in participating in exercise regimes for vulnerable people is the relationship fostered between staff and service users, the level of individual support provided, and the flexible approach to users' progress. Activities on offer are",
author = "Raine, {Pamela M.} and Carole Truman and A. Southerst",
year = "2002",
month = feb,
doi = "10.1080/096382301200041452",
language = "English",
volume = "11",
pages = "43--53",
journal = "Journal of Mental Health",
issn = "0963-8237",
publisher = "Informa Healthcare",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The development of a community gym for people with mental health problems: Influences on psychological accessibility

AU - Raine, Pamela M.

AU - Truman, Carole

AU - Southerst, A.

PY - 2002/2

Y1 - 2002/2

N2 - In this paper we explore the ways in which one innovative mental health service has attempted to address the issue of psychological accessibility and 'safety' for its users. Drawing upon an evaluation of a community-based exercise facility for people with mental health problems, and using a qualitative research approach, we explore the views of users, service providers and referral agencies to draw out those aspects of the service, which influence accessibility. Our findings emphasise the importance of the facility's non-institutional appearance, its community location, and the perceived (physical and psychological) 'distance' from medically based mental health services. meaningful to service users and socially valued (and therefore non-stigmatising). Crucial to reducing any potential psychological 'risk' involved in participating in exercise regimes for vulnerable people is the relationship fostered between staff and service users, the level of individual support provided, and the flexible approach to users' progress. Activities on offer are

AB - In this paper we explore the ways in which one innovative mental health service has attempted to address the issue of psychological accessibility and 'safety' for its users. Drawing upon an evaluation of a community-based exercise facility for people with mental health problems, and using a qualitative research approach, we explore the views of users, service providers and referral agencies to draw out those aspects of the service, which influence accessibility. Our findings emphasise the importance of the facility's non-institutional appearance, its community location, and the perceived (physical and psychological) 'distance' from medically based mental health services. meaningful to service users and socially valued (and therefore non-stigmatising). Crucial to reducing any potential psychological 'risk' involved in participating in exercise regimes for vulnerable people is the relationship fostered between staff and service users, the level of individual support provided, and the flexible approach to users' progress. Activities on offer are

U2 - 10.1080/096382301200041452

DO - 10.1080/096382301200041452

M3 - Journal article

VL - 11

SP - 43

EP - 53

JO - Journal of Mental Health

JF - Journal of Mental Health

SN - 0963-8237

IS - 1

ER -