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Reconciling voices.

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  • 1School of Nursing, Dublin City University, Collins Avenue, Dublin, Ireland.

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This study explores how individuals with mental health issues construct meaning from their experiences using narrative analysis. Understanding personal narratives is crucial for sensitive nursing care and advancing mental health research.

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Area of Science:

  • Mental Health Nursing
  • Psychiatric Nursing
  • Narrative Psychology

Background:

  • Limited nursing research exists on how individuals with mental health problems interpret their experiences of distress.
  • Few studies capture service users' perspectives on the meaning of their mental health 'disorder' experiences.
  • Narrative psychology posits that individuals organize experiences and derive meaning through narrative structures.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To explore the meaning-making processes of individuals experiencing mental health problems through their personal narratives.
  • To analyze the frameworks and metaphors used by individuals to understand their mental health experiences.
  • To highlight the interplay between internal beliefs and external societal/psychiatric influences on personal meaning.

Main Methods:

  • Employed a validated narrative analysis approach.
  • Analyzed the transcribed narrative of a single male participant experiencing mental health challenges.
  • Focused on identifying meaning-making processes within the participant's self-told story.

Main Results:

  • The study identified specific frameworks and metaphors Gary used to make sense of his mental health experiences.
  • It revealed tensions between Gary's internal perspectives and external societal and psychiatric narratives.
  • The analysis underscored the significance of personal meanings embedded within individual stories.

Conclusions:

  • Attending to and responding to personal meanings within narratives is vital for developing sensitive and effective nursing care.
  • Incorporating narrative analysis can enrich nursing research by valuing service users' lived experiences.
  • This approach offers a deeper understanding of mental health experiences beyond clinical diagnostic frameworks.