Davidson Larry, Shahar Golan, Lawless Martha Staeheli, Sells David, Tondora Janis
Department of Psychiatry, Program on Recovery and Community Health, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, CT 06513, USA.
Psychiatry. 2006 Summer;69(2):151-63. doi: 10.1521/psyc.2006.69.2.151.
As part of the emerging recovery paradigm, there is an increasing need for psychiatric treatment and rehabilitation to be strengths-based and to be driven by the desires and preferences of the person with mental illness. Yet if mental illness is a brain disease, it is not at all clear how these characteristics contribute to improvement in the person's condition or influence the course and outcome of the disorder. To avoid these aspects being relegated to the role of nonspecific factors, the field must develop an understanding of the role of strengths and interests in recovery. To contribute to this effort, we review the existing empirical research on the protective and stress-buffering effects of positive life events and qualitative data on the importance of play and pleasure in the lives of people with mental illness. We conclude by considering briefly the implications of this research for clinical practice.
作为新兴康复模式的一部分,精神治疗与康复越来越需要基于优势,并由患有精神疾病的人的愿望和偏好来驱动。然而,如果精神疾病是一种脑部疾病,那么这些特征究竟如何有助于改善患者状况或影响疾病的进程和结果,就完全不清楚了。为避免这些方面沦为非特异性因素的角色,该领域必须深入理解优势和兴趣在康复中的作用。为推动这一工作,我们回顾了关于积极生活事件的保护和压力缓冲作用的现有实证研究,以及关于玩耍和愉悦在精神疾病患者生活中的重要性的定性数据。最后,我们简要考虑了这项研究对临床实践的启示。