In‐Sight: an evaluation of user‐led, recovery‐based, holistic group training for bipolar disorder
Abstract
This paper reports outcomes from a holistic, recovery‐based, user‐led group training for people with DSM‐IV bipolar disorder. Drawn from professional therapies and personal experience of the illness by the user‐researcher, the training was delivered over 12 weekly sessions. Using a case‐study approach, an experimental design incorporated pilot (eight participants), main study (five) and control groups (six). Self‐report scales measured mood, coping, empowerment and quality of life pre‐, post‐ and six months post‐training. Semi‐structured interviews noted individual change within the same time frame. Interviews with mental health professionals, medical note analysis and user‐researcher observations also informed the study. Findings from self‐report questionnaires indicated that participants experienced improved mood stability, symptom severity, coping and quality of life and greater empowerment. Out of the six controls, two indicated slight but slow recovery, four continued to use poor coping skills, and two of these four experienced major relapses.
Keywords
Citation
Straughan, H. and Buckenham, M. (2006), "In‐Sight: an evaluation of user‐led, recovery‐based, holistic group training for bipolar disorder", Journal of Public Mental Health, Vol. 5 No. 3, pp. 29-43. https://doi.org/10.1108/17465729200600024
Publisher
:Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2006, Emerald Group Publishing Limited