Recovering from recurrent mental health problems: giving up and fighting to get better

scientific article

Recovering from recurrent mental health problems: giving up and fighting to get better is …
instance of (P31):
scholarly articleQ13442814

External links are
P356DOI10.1111/J.1447-0349.2009.00636.X
P932PMC publication ID2839479
P698PubMed publication ID20074198
P5875ResearchGate publication ID41027270

P2093author name stringDonna Tedstone Doherty
Yulia Kartalova-O'Doherty
P2860cites workThe top ten concerns about recovery encountered in mental health system transformationQ28238430
Recovery from mental illness as an emergent concept and practice in Australia and the UKQ28300168
Personality, coping style, emotion and cancer: towards an integrative modelQ34049597
Learned helplessness in humans: critique and reformulationQ34262251
The experience of recovery from schizophrenia: towards an empirically validated stage modelQ35544267
A consideration of the social trajectory of psychiatric nursing in IrelandQ35837722
An analysis of the definitions and elements of recovery: a review of the literatureQ36908625
An empirical literature review of definitions of severe and persistent mental illnessQ37996806
Psychological response to breast cancer: effect on outcomeQ39568687
Determining the effectiveness of mental health services from a consumer perspective: part 2: barriers to recovery and principles for evaluationQ39836852
Former patients' experience of psychiatric care: a qualitative investigationQ43456745
Correlates of insider and outsider conceptualizations of recoveryQ44984845
Reactions to gastrointestinal cancer--variation in mental adjustment and emotional well-being over time in patients with different prognosesQ47349176
The negotiation of identity among people with mental illness in rural communitiesQ47600303
Who cares for whom? Re-examining the nurse - patient relationship.Q50761883
Iatrogenic sexual dysfunction and the protective withholding of information: in whose best interest?Q50930331
Former patients' experience of psychiatric care: a qualitative investigation.Q51873456
Mental attitudes to cancer: an additional prognostic factor.Q52083412
P433issue1
P407language of work or nameEnglishQ1860
P921main subjectmental healthQ317309
P304page(s)3-15
P577publication date2010-02-01
P1433published inInternational Journal of Mental Health NursingQ15753845
P1476titleRecovering from recurrent mental health problems: giving up and fighting to get better
P478volume19

Reverse relations

cites work (P2860)
Q39278419"It's Either Do It or Die".
Q37735834A Qualitative Inquiry into the Complex Features of Strained Interactions: Analysis and Implications for Health Care Personnel
Q38087993An integrative review of what contributes to personal recovery in psychiatric disabilities.
Q64226937Household Food Insecurity Narrows the Sex Gap in Five Adverse Mental Health Outcomes among Canadian Adults
Q38026164International differences in understanding recovery: systematic review.
Q44155444Mental health nurses' views of recovery within an acute setting
Q39203816Non-attendance at counselling therapy in cocaine-using methadone-maintained patients: lessons learnt from an abandoned randomised controlled trial.
Q51847447Recovering from mental health problems: perceived positive and negative effects of medication on reconnecting with life.
Q130305556Recovery From Severe Mental Health Problems: A Systematic Review of Service User and Informal Caregiver Perspectives
Q37900344Self-care in mental health services: a narrative review
Q50651410Stability in intensive psychiatry: a concept analysis.
Q47658669Swedish Young Adults' Experiences of Psychiatric Care during Transition to Adulthood
Q47748194The meaning of recovery in a regional mental health service: an action research study

Search more.