Peoples' understandings of a primary care-based mental health self-help clinic

Anne Rogers, Dianne Oliver, Peter Bower, Karina Lovell, Dave Richards

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    Abstract

    Self-help programmes are increasingly advocated as a means of managing mental health problems. This qualitative study explored patients' understandings of the use of a UK primary care-based self-help clinic (facilitated by a nurse). As part of a wider evaluation of the clinic, in-depth interviews were conducted with a purposive sub-sample of clinic users. Data indicate that people understand their problem as one of having lost an ability to cope, and that the ethos underlying the clinic is well matched to restore a sense of coping, by motivating patients to re-establish and retain control over their everyday lives. However, some patients experienced a sense of dissonance between prior expectations and actual use of the self-help clinic. Without prior familiarity with self-help, engaging the patient as the mechanism of change may be difficult. Some patients expected formal counselling and were influenced in this by their previous experience of services and discussions with the GP at the point of referral. It takes time and active engagement with self-help materials before patients become aware that they are a crucial mechanism of change. Patients may benefit from information and a referral process, which emphasises the centrality of self-efficacy and the patient as 'change agent' prior to referral. © 2003 Elsevier Science Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)41-46
    Number of pages5
    JournalPatient education and counseling
    Volume53
    Issue number1
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - Apr 2004

    Keywords

    • Mental health
    • Primary care
    • Self-help

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