Abstract
Background: Several hospitals in Norway provide short self-referral inpatient treatment to patients with severe mental diagnosis. No studies have compared the experiences of patients who have had the opportunity to self-refer to inpatient treatment with patients who have received treatment as usual. This qualitative study was nested within a randomised controlled trial investigating the effect of self-referral to inpatient treatment. The aim was to explore how patients with severe mental diagnosis coped four months after signing a contract for self-referral, as compared to patients receiving treatment as usual. Methods. Data was collected using qualitative individual interviews with patients with severe mental diagnosis, conducted four months after being randomised either to a contract for self-referral (intervention group) or to treatment as usual (control group). Results: Twenty-five patients participated in interviews - 11 from the intervention group and 14 from the control group. Results four months after randomisation showed that patients with a contract for self-referral appeared to have more confidence in strategies to cope with mental illness and to apply more active cognitive strategies. Patients with a contract also expressed less resignation, hopelessness and powerlessness than patients without a contract. In addition, patients with a contract seemed to be closer to the ideal of living a «normal» life and being a «normal» person. Conclusion: The results indicate that the patients who had a contract for self-referral had come further in the recovery process and should possibly be better off during treatment.
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Rise, M. B., Evensen, G. H., Moljord, I. E. O., Rø, M., Bjørgen, D., & Eriksen, L. (2014). How do patients with severe mental diagnosis cope in everyday life - A qualitative study comparing patients’ experiences of self-referral inpatient treatment with treatment as usual? BMC Health Services Research, 14(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/1472-6963-14-347
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