Eiroa-Orosa Francisco José, Rowe Michael
Yale Program for Recovery and Community Health, Department of Psychiatry, Yale School of Medicine, Yale University, New HavenCT, United States.
Section of Personality, Evaluation and Psychological Treatment, Department of Clinical Psychology and Psychobiology, Institute of Neurosciences, School of Psychology, University of Barcelona, BarcelonaSpain.
Front Psychol. 2017 Jun 21;8:1020. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2017.01020. eCollection 2017.
Transferring principles and practices to different sociocultural and professional contexts in the field of mental health can be very complex. Previous research on public health policy points to difficulties in different areas such as the understanding the new concepts, their applicability in different health systems, and suitable approaches to its effective implementation. The purpose of this article is to describe and analyze the process of transferring the concept of Citizenship, from its United States origins in mental health outreach work with persons who are homeless to Catalonia, Spain. We define Citizenship as promoting the rights, responsibilities, roles, resources and relationships of persons with mental illnesses, along with a sense of belonging that is validated by other citizens. The process of this transition involves embedding Citizenship in the mental health "first-person" (internationally known as Consumer/Survivor/Peer) movement in Catalonia. The paper includes a discussion of the concept of transference, including a case example of the adoption of the concept of mental health recovery in different countries. Following this, we describe the United States Citizenship model and key elements of its development. We then turn to Spain and the evolution of its mental health system, and then to Catalonia for a brief case history of transference of the principles and practices of Citizenship to that region. The "take home message" of this work is that concepts being brought from one sociocultural and national context to another, must focus on contextualization in the 'adoptee's' practices, including the balance between personal involvement and professional rigor, the involvement of key actors, and ongoing evaluation of actions taken.
将心理健康领域的原则和实践应用于不同的社会文化和专业背景可能非常复杂。先前关于公共卫生政策的研究指出了不同领域存在的困难,比如对新概念的理解、它们在不同卫生系统中的适用性,以及有效实施这些概念的合适方法。本文的目的是描述和分析公民身份概念从其在美国与无家可归者心理健康外展工作中的起源转移到西班牙加泰罗尼亚的过程。我们将公民身份定义为促进患有精神疾病者的权利、责任、角色、资源和关系,以及一种得到其他公民认可的归属感。这一转变过程涉及将公民身份融入加泰罗尼亚的心理健康“第一人称”(国际上称为消费者/幸存者/同伴)运动中。本文讨论了转移的概念,包括不同国家采用心理健康康复概念的一个案例。在此之后,我们描述了美国的公民身份模式及其发展的关键要素。接着我们转向西班牙及其心理健康系统的演变,然后到加泰罗尼亚,简要介绍公民身份原则和实践转移到该地区的案例历史。这项工作的“关键信息”是,从一个社会文化和国家背景引入到另一个背景的概念,必须注重在“接受者”实践中的情境化,包括个人参与和专业严谨性之间的平衡、关键行为者的参与,以及对所采取行动的持续评估。