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Related Experiment Videos

Coping with psychosis: an integrative developmental framework.

David Roe1, Philip T Yanos, Paul H Lysaker

  • 1Department of Community Mental Health, Faculty of Social Welfare and Health Studies, University of Haifa, Israel. droe@univ.haifa.ac.il

The Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease
|December 14, 2006
PubMed
Summary
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Persons with severe mental illness can actively influence recovery by employing proactive coping strategies. This framework categorizes coping into reactive, anticipatory, preventive, and proactive modes for better understanding and application in severe mental illness recovery.

Area of Science:

  • Psychiatry
  • Clinical Psychology
  • Mental Health Recovery

Background:

  • Severe mental illness (SMI), including schizophrenia, presents significant challenges to recovery.
  • Individuals with SMI can actively influence their recovery process through coping mechanisms.
  • Existing research highlights the need for clearer conceptualization and categorization of coping strategies in SMI.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To develop a clinically useful framework for understanding coping processes in severe mental illness.
  • To apply Schwarzer's proactive coping theory to the context of SMI recovery.
  • To categorize coping into distinct modes relevant to SMI.

Main Methods:

  • Application of proactive coping theory to severe mental illness.
  • Construction of a conceptual framework for coping processes.

Related Experiment Videos

  • Description of four coping modes: reactive, anticipatory, preventive, and proactive.
  • Elaboration on the role of meaning-making as an integrative element.
  • Main Results:

    • A novel framework categorizing coping in SMI into four modes: reactive, anticipatory, preventive, and proactive.
    • Identification of meaning-making as a key integrative component within the coping framework.
    • The framework offers a structured approach to understanding coping in the context of SMI.

    Conclusions:

    • The proposed coping framework provides a clinically relevant model for understanding and potentially enhancing recovery in severe mental illness.
    • Further research is needed to validate this model and explore its relationship with symptoms, functioning, and overall recovery outcomes.
    • This work emphasizes the active role of individuals with SMI in their recovery journey through diverse coping strategies.