The Evolving Understanding of Recovery: What the Sociology of Mental Health has to Offer

scientific article published on November 2012

The Evolving Understanding of Recovery: What the Sociology of Mental Health has to Offer is …
instance of (P31):
scholarly articleQ13442814

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P356DOI10.1177/0160597612458904
P932PMC publication ID3592967
P698PubMed publication ID23483849
P5875ResearchGate publication ID236040151

P2093author name stringDennis P Watson
P2860cites workInitial severity and antidepressant benefits: a meta-analysis of data submitted to the Food and Drug AdministrationQ21092366
The top ten concerns about recovery encountered in mental health system transformationQ28238430
The patient as a policy factor: a historical case study of the consumer/survivor movement in mental healthQ28239172
Shared decision making and medication management in the recovery processQ28272453
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Illness management and recovery: a review of the researchQ34938562
What does recovery mean to you? Lessons from the recovery experience for research and practiceQ36154896
From Structural Chaos to a Model of Consumer Support: Understanding the Roles of Structure and Agency in Mental Health Recovery for the Formerly HomelessQ36487867
An analysis of the definitions and elements of recovery: a review of the literatureQ36908625
Social disconnectedness, perceived isolation, and health among older adultsQ37375039
A theory of social integration as quality of lifeQ37444254
Course types in schizophrenia: an analysis of European and American studiesQ39556749
The heterogeneity of the long-term course of schizophreniaQ39556753
Chronicity in schizophrenia: fact, partial fact, or artifact?Q39658857
Focus on transformation: a public health model of mental health for the 21st centuryQ39982885
Addiction recovery: its definition and conceptual boundariesQ46986558
Geneticization of deviant behavior and consequences for stigma: the case of mental illnessQ47298265
An exploratory analysis of correlates of recoveryQ47635893
The concept of recovery as an organizing principle for integrating mental health and addiction services.Q51906023
Recovery: an opportunity to transcend our differences.Q51908107
Outcomes for the sociology of mental health: are we meeting our goals?Q51955603
The mental health continuum: from languishing to flourishing in life.Q51955604
The role of sociology in the study of mental health ... and the role of mental health in the study of sociology.Q51962495
Work and mental illness. I. Toward an integration of the rehabilitation process.Q52074577
THE INMATE GROUP IN CUSTODIAL AND TREATMENT SETTINGSQ52350497
US Socioeconomic and Racial Differences in Health: Patterns and ExplanationsQ57483559
Stressful life events and depressive symptoms: disaggregating the effects of acute stressors and chronic strainsQ68058346
Social class and psychological distressQ71288040
How does functional disability affect depressive symptoms in late life? The role of perceived social support and psychological resourcesQ79618210
P433issue4
P921main subjectmental healthQ317309
P304page(s)290-308
P577publication date2012-11-01
P1433published inHumanity & SocietyQ18350356
P1476titleThe Evolving Understanding of Recovery: What the Sociology of Mental Health has to Offer
P478volume36

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cites work (P2860)
Q47141081Developing Substance Use Programming for Person-Oriented Recovery and Treatment (SUPPORT): protocol for a pilot randomized controlled trial
Q47580440Empowerment, self and engagement in day center occupations: a longitudinal study among people with long-term mental illness
Q33670574Implementing shared decision making in routine mental health care
Q34538713Involvement in mental health self-help groups and recovery
Q40549636Supporting recovery in patients with psychosis through care by community-based adult mental health teams (REFOCUS): a multisite, cluster, randomised, controlled trial

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