Felton Barbara J
Institute for Health, Health Care Policy and Aging Research, Rutgers, The State University, New Brunswick, New Jersey 08901, USA.
Am J Community Psychol. 2005 Dec;36(3-4):373-86. doi: 10.1007/s10464-005-8632-0.
In this ethnographic study of a mental health service agency staffed by "consumers," or fellow "recipients" of services for serious mental illness, the concept of community narrative provides the framework for examining how such an agency preserves its consumer identity while providing services dictated by the established service system. Locating the agency's narrative in its "origins tale," analysis revealed five principles comprising the agency's identity: a normalizing view of mental illness, a commitment to helping, a dual-valued understanding of the mental health system, and beliefs in recovery and in the significance of employment as a criterion for recovery. Predicted consequences of narrative functioning emerged in social climate and staff expressions of cohesion and commitment. The local meaning of these narrative themes reveals the agency's view of the consumer element in its work and its solution to the dilemma of being both inside and outside of the mental health system.
在这项人种志研究中,一家心理健康服务机构由严重精神疾病患者(即服务的“消费者”或“接受者”同伴)担任工作人员,社区叙事的概念为审视这样一个机构如何在提供既定服务系统所规定的服务时保持其消费者身份提供了框架。通过将该机构的叙事置于其“起源故事”中进行分析,发现了构成该机构身份的五项原则:对精神疾病的常态化看法、帮助他人的承诺、对心理健康系统的双重价值理解、对康复的信念以及对就业作为康复标准的重要性的信念。叙事功能的预期后果出现在社会氛围以及工作人员的凝聚力和承诺表达中。这些叙事主题的当地意义揭示了该机构对其工作中消费者元素的看法以及它对处于心理健康系统内外这一两难困境的解决方案。