Abstract

This study explores the lived experience of hospitalisation from the perspective of people with a mental health disorder. This hermeneutic-phenomenological study, which forms part of a larger qualitative serial inquiry, uses a participatory research design, with analysis inspired by interpretative phenomenological analysis. Fourteen participants were interviewed twice: first during hospitalisation and then again 3months following hospital discharge. Findings are reported from the entire interview data set. Our findings suggest that mental health hospitalisation is a contradictory experience for patients. On one hand, our study participants experienced the hospital as a place where it is alright to be vulnerable, while on the other hand participants experienced hospitalisation as a burden of everyday stigma and signs of depersonalisation. We conclude that it is important to recognise that patients in need of inpatient treatment for mental illnesses are, in fact, people first and foremost. More reflective practice can be developed by shifting the focus to recovery-oriented practices to and open dialogue-based approaches.

Full Text
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