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1.
Int J Qual Stud Health Well-being ; 18(1): 2202972, 2023 Dec.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37066735

RESUMEN

PURPOSE: The integration of mental health rehabilitees into the labour market is an important policy objective everywhere in the world. The international Clubhouse organization is a third-sector actor that offers community-based psychosocial rehabilitation and supports and promotes rehabilitees' state of acting and exerting power over their lives, including their (re)employment. In this article, we adopt the perspective of discursive psychology and ask how mental health rehabilitees' agency is constructed and ideally also promoted in the Clubhouse-based Transitional Employment (TE) programme. METHODS: The data consisted of 26 video-recorded TE meetings in which staff and rehabilitees of one Finnish Clubhouse discussed ways to further their contacts with potential employers. The analysis was informed by discursive psychology, which has been heavily influenced by conversation analysis. RESULTS: The analysis demonstrated how rehabilitees adopt agentic positions in respect to TE-related future activities, and how Clubhouse staff promote and encourage but also discourage and invalidate these agentic positionings. The analysis demonstrated the multifaceted nature of agency and agency promotion in the TE programme. CONCLUSIONS: Although ideally, Clubhouse activities are based on equal opportunities, in everyday interaction practices, the staff exercise significant power over the question whose agency is promoted and validated in the TE programme.


Asunto(s)
Trastornos Mentales , Rehabilitación Psiquiátrica , Humanos , Salud Mental , Trastornos Mentales/psicología , Rehabilitación Psiquiátrica/métodos , Empleo , Finlandia
2.
Healthcare (Basel) ; 10(12)2022 Dec 12.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36554034

RESUMEN

Narratives about clients' service experiences in healthcare organizations constitute a crucial way for clients to make sense of their illness, its treatment, and their role in the service process. This is important because the client's role has recently changed from that of a passive object of care into an active responsible agent. Utilizing Bamberg's narrative positioning analysis as a method, and 14 thematic interviews of healthcare clients with multiple health-related problems as data, we investigated the expectations of the client's role in their narratives about negative service experiences. All the narratives addressed the question of the clients' "activeness" in some way. We identified three narrative types. In the first, the clients actively sought help, but did not receive it; in the second, the clients positioned themselves as helpless and inactive, left without the care they needed; and in the third, the clients argued against having to fight for their care. In all these narrative types, the clients either demonstrated their own activeness or justified their lack of it, which-despite attempts to resist the ideal of an "active client"-ultimately just reinforced it. Attempts to improve service experiences of clients with considerable service needs require a heightened awareness of clients' moral struggles.

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