Item type | Home library | Class number | URL | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Electronic book | Hillingdon Hospitals Library Services (Hillingdon Hospitals NHS Foundation) Online | Link to resource | Available |
Chapter 1. Schizophrenia as a Public Health Problem -- Chapter 2: Current Approaches to Schizophrenia Treatment. Chapter 3 -- Theoretical foundations of peer support -- Chapter 4. Origins of peer support and the modern recovery movement in the United States -- Chapter 5. Peer support and mental health-a review of the evidence. Chapter 6: Realist perspective and methodology -- Chapter 7. Diversity in programmatic features, peer support strategies, potential mechanisms, and outcomes -- Chapter 8. Implementation considerations and key challenges -- Chapter 9. Summary, implications, and future directions.
Many mental health providers are seeking guidance in designing and improving peer support programs for people with mental illnesses. However, the evidence base in this area is limited by lack of consensus on the core components of peer support. This research provides a comprehensive, nuanced view of peer support reaching people with schizophrenia. Results of a realist review of 355 sources and interviews with experts in the field are presented. Realist review is an approach to evidence synthesis that asks, 'What works, for whom, and in what circumstances?' Results include a typology of key functions of peer support (e.g., being there, linkage to clinical care and community resources, systems advocacy, ongoing support), documented benefits (e.g., decreased acute care utilization, increased recovery), and implementation recommendations (e.g., critical mass of peer workers, supportive infrastructure, an organizational recovery orientation). The book is intended for program planners, managers, and researchers.
There are no comments on this title.