Abstract
Clubhouses have demonstrated significant positive psychosocial outcomes, in addition to more enduring resiliencies for persons with histories of severe persistent mental illness (SPMI). However, there is a paucity of research investigating the recovery processes impacted by community-based interventions like clubhouse for SPMI. Research into metacognition and its relation to recovery trajectories in SPMI creates a compelling cognitive and intersubjective framework within which to understand the recovery impacts of the clubhouse intervention model of social practice. The present article examines significant areas of conceptual overlap between the clubhouse model of social practice, metacognition, and intersubjective recovery processes. A preliminary research project investigating the metacognitive impacts of community-based interventions for SPMI is presented. An overview of the theoretical and practical relevance of the clubhouse community-based treatment model of social practice to metacognitive recovery processes is presented through a discussion of the resilience observed in clubhouse settings as it relates to the enhancement of intersubjectivity. The clubhouse model of social practice is a unique therapeutic modality with outcomes that can be readily investigated and explained through metacognitive processes relevant to recovery in SPMI. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2020 APA, all rights reserved).
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