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Related Concept Videos

Classification of Illness01:17

Classification of Illness

The meaning of illness is individualized to each person who experiences an alteration in health. In contrast, disease is a medical term indicating a pathological change in the structure and function of the body or mind. It is a condition that has specific symptoms and boundaries.
An illness is a response to a disease in which the person's level of functioning is changed compared with a previous level. The general classification of illness includes acute and chronic.
Acute illness is severe and...
Restorative Care01:19

Restorative Care

Restorative care is provided once a patient has been discharged from a healthcare facility and requires additional services. The additional services include home care, rehabilitation programs, and extended care. Restorative care centers help the patient regain their previous level of functioning or acquire a new level of functioning due to the incapacitating effects of a disease or a disability. It aims to assist patients in enhancing their quality of life by encouraging independence,...
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Specialized Care Centers and Settings-II

Rural Health Centers
Rural health centers are specialized care facilities in remote locations with very few medical personnel. The primary care providers who run the centers are mostly Registered Nurse Practitioners. Here, emergency treatment is provided to critically ill or injured patients before they are transferred to the closest hospital. Fortunately, due to advancement in technology, many rural healthcare facilities and professionals have easy access to diagnostic and treatment...
Bonanno's Theory of Grieving01:17

Bonanno's Theory of Grieving

Grieving is a complex psychological and emotional process that varies significantly among individuals. George Bonanno's research on bereavement identified four distinct patterns of grieving, offering a nuanced understanding of how people cope with significant loss, such as the death of a spouse, over extended periods. These patterns — resilience, recovery, chronic dysfunction, and delayed grief — highlight the diversity in emotional responses and adaptive mechanisms.
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Community Based Intervention

Community-based interventions in mental health represent a paradigm shift from institution-centered care to treatments embedded within the fabric of local communities. By prioritizing inclusion and leveraging existing societal structures, this approach fosters a supportive environment conducive to addressing mental health challenges while promoting individual dignity and agency.
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Related Experiment Video

Updated: May 24, 2026

Integrating Computerized Linguistic and Social Network Analyses to Capture Addiction Recovery Capital in an Online Community
08:53

Integrating Computerized Linguistic and Social Network Analyses to Capture Addiction Recovery Capital in an Online Community

Published on: May 31, 2019

Recovery in New Zealand: an evolving concept?

Mary O'Hagan1, Paul Reynolds, Cherryl Smith

  • 1International Recovery Consultant, Wellington, New Zealand. mary@maryohagan.com

International Review of Psychiatry (Abingdon, England)
|March 6, 2012
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Recovery concepts in New Zealand mental health are evolving. While "recovery" has declined, its core ideas persist in "whanau ora" and "well-being" approaches, promoting holistic family health.

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Non-invasive Assessments of Subjective and Objective Recovery Characteristics Following an Exhaustive Jump Protocol
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08:21

Non-invasive Assessments of Subjective and Objective Recovery Characteristics Following an Exhaustive Jump Protocol

Published on: June 8, 2017

Area of Science:

  • Mental Health Services Research
  • Public Health Policy
  • Sociology of Health

Background:

  • The concept of recovery in mental health services was officially promoted in New Zealand in 1998.
  • Since the mid-2000s, the prominence of

Purpose of the Study:

  • To examine the evolution of recovery concepts in New Zealand's mental health landscape.
  • To explore the adoption and implications of "whanau ora" and "well-being" as successor terms.
  • To analyze the advantages of integrating recovery principles into a broader well-being agenda.

Main Methods:

  • Qualitative analysis of policy shifts and terminology in New Zealand mental health.
  • Review of definitions and underlying models (e.g., He Korowai Oranga, Te Whare Tapa Wha).
  • Conceptual analysis of the integration of recovery into well-being frameworks.

Main Results:

  • The term "recovery" has seen a decline in New Zealand mental health discourse since the mid-2000s.
  • "Whanau ora" (family well-being) and "well-being" have emerged as key concepts, influenced by Maori Health Strategy (He Korowai Oranga).
  • The Te Whare Tapa Wha model underpins "whanau ora", emphasizing a balance of spiritual, physical, psychological, and family health.

Conclusions:

  • The fundamental principles of mental health recovery are being carried forward through "whanau ora" and "well-being" frameworks in New Zealand.
  • Integrating recovery into a wider "well-being" agenda offers benefits such as reduced discrimination and a move away from deficit-based approaches.
  • The adoption of "whanau ora" and "well-being" reflects a holistic, family-centered approach to health and mental health in New Zealand.