IS SERIOUS MENTAL ILLNESS A CHRONIC CONDITION?
A hundred years ago Emil Kraepelin suggested that once patients had been diagnosed as suffering from dementia praecox, they faced an inevitable decline towards a poor outcome (Reference KraepelinKraepelin, 1919). In his classic 1961 text, Asylums: Essays on the Social Situation of Mental Patients and Other Inmates, Goffman described how the process of institutionalisation socialised people into the role of a good patient, someone ‘dull, harmless and inconspicuous’, which in turn reinforced notions of chronicity in severe mental illness (Reference GoffmanGoffman, 1968). This idea of inevitable inexorable decline has, however, become increasingly challenged by an emerging evidence base from long-term follow-up studies suggesting that approximately half the people diagnosed with a psychotic illness have a favourable outcome (Reference Harrison, Hopper and CraigHarrison et al, 2001) and that early intervention during the initial ‘critical period’ of a first episode of psychosis improves the chance of recovery in the short and longer term (Reference Birchwood, McGorry and JacksonBirchwood, 1998). There is also increasing evidence that sociocultural factors are important in the genesis of psychosis and that focusing on social recovery can improve patient outcomes (Reference WarnerWarner, 2003).
DECONSTRUCTING RECOVERY
There is, however, no single agreed definition of ‘recovery’ and indeed the largely consumerled literature from the USA suggests that it can mean different things to different people at different points in their illness pathway. William Anthony has developed a widely used definition of ‘recovery’ as
‘a way of living a satisfying, hopeful and contributing life even with the limitations caused by illness. Recovery involves the development of a new meaning and purpose in one's life as one grows beyond the catastrophic effects of mental illness’ (Antony, 1993: p. 21).
There are also few conceptual models underpinning the notion of recovery. Strauss et al (Reference Strauss, Hafez and Leiberman1985) developed the theory of ‘wood shedding’ where, following an initial improvement, the individual's condition may ‘plateau’ for long periods and then suddenly improve in a discontinuous manner. More recently, Jacobson & Greenley (Reference Jacobson and Greenley2001) developed a model that encompasses both the need for internal conditions of hope, healing and empowerment experienced by the person in recovery and external conditions that facilitate recovery, such as the implementation of the principle of human rights and the development of recovery-oriented services. An overarching message from this literature is that hope and restoration of a meaningful life are possible despite a diagnosis of serious mental illness.
DIFFERENT MODELS OF CARE
With the exception of many of those working in rehabilitation services, the recovery model – despite its growing evidence base and patient support – has yet to make a significant impact on the working practices of the majority of mental health professionals in primary or secondary healthcare. Chronic care is the dominant framework.
Models of care based on ‘chronic disease management’, a more active approach to maximising quality of care in chronic illness, have recently found favour in policy circles (Department of Health, 2004a ) and are now being widely adopted in primary and specialist care for common chronic conditions such as diabetes, depression and heart failure (more information can be obtained from the Improving Chronic Illness Care website http://www.improvingchroniccare.org). There is now evidence that models of care based on chronic disease management can improve outcomes for people with serious mental health problems (Reference Simon, Ludman and UnutzerSimon et al, 2005). However, collective identification with the chronic illness ‘label’ fits less well with mental illness than many other chronic conditions and, in contrast to many health professionals, patients are far less likely to identify themselves as someone with a chronic illness (Reference Lester, Tritter and SorohanLester et al, 2005). Instead, they prefer a social model of illness that emphasises recovery, at least in terms of quality of life issues such as returning to work and regaining family ties, and acknowledge the importance of patients being involved in supporting others in their recovery (Reference Lester, Tritter and SorohanLester et al, 2005).
There are also policy tensions between frameworks such as the National Service Framework for Mental Health (Department of Health, 1999) and the more recent National Health Service Improvement Plan (Department of Health, 2004b ), which emphasise chronicity, and others that highlight the importance of recovery. The Journey to Recovery (Department of Health, 2001) stated that the mental health system should support people in settings of their own choosing and enable access to community resources including housing and work or whatever they felt was critical to their own recovery. The fifth of ten essential shared capabilities for the whole mental health workforce formulated by the National Institute for Mental Health in England and the Sainsbury Centre for Mental Health in 2004 is ‘promoting recovery’ (Department of Health, 2004c ). The National Service Framework for ‘long-term conditions’, although not overtly directed at mental health service users, has relevance for patients with serious mental illness and includes over 300 references to rehabilitation.
Such different policy imperatives, theoretical frameworks and aspirations for care can lead to problems in creating environments, structures and processes that encourage recovery in a way that makes sense to both patients and health professionals. Are we intending to deliver (mostly if not entirely) medical care for a chronic condition, or promoting collaborative models of care to improve recovery? If the latter, this raises a series of issues, including the need to develop practical methods to enable the health service and health professionals to promote recovery in practice.
HOW CAN WE DEVELOP ‘RECOVERY’ IN PRACTICE?
Policy contradictions are not the prerogative of mental health service planners, although they are a frequent occurrence (Reference Glasby, Lester and ClarkeGlasby et al, 2003). However, there does need to be a more consistent policy direction to support and inform commissioners and providers in developing new services. At a structural level, employing people who use mental health services as a result of rather than in spite of such experience emphasises national commitment to the philosophy and practice of recovery and also contributes to social recovery at an individual level. The introduction of Support Time and Recovery workers has led to the employment of existing and former service users with a specific remit to facilitate pathways to recovery through, for example, providing companionship and friendship and helping people to live ‘ordinary lives’. Within a primary care setting, the job description of graduate primary-care mental health workers now includes lived experience as a desirable quality.
The important ingredient for the individual is the underpinning philosophy of recovery that encompasses hope and therapeutic optimism within a continuing professional–patient relationship. At the level of the consultation, more attention needs to be paid to finding a shared, acceptable language that reflects new ways of framing the doctor–patient relationship. Perhaps we should actively avoid the term ‘chronic disease management’ and instead talk of collaborative models of care, drawing on Wagner's chronic care model (Reference Wagner, Austin and Von KorffWagner et al, 1996; Reference Von Korff, Gruman and SchaeferVon Korff et al, 1997; also see http://www.improvingchroniccare.org). In a collaborative model, informed, activated patients, involved in their own care, are the key to developing recovery-oriented services. Health professionals need to be prepared and proactive, with resources and expertise. In a collaborative doctor–patient relationship, the patient is an active participant able to make choices (for example, about medication) in partnership with a health professional. To work, this requires a professional with knowledge of the evidence base and appropriate expertise, and organisational systems and support in place to deliver care; crucially, however, the professional is able to accept that patients with serious mental illness can both reflect on their mental distress and provide a valuable understanding of their illness and treatment preferences, even if these lie outside currently recognised guidelines and protocols. Recovery-oriented services also need health professionals to believe that they can make a difference and, for some, this may mean changing the way they conceptualise the course of serious mental illness (Reference Roberts and WolfsonRoberts & Wolfson, 2004). In essence, therefore, if we want to develop recovery-oriented services for people with serious mental illness, we need to offer systematically organised and personally tailored collaborative help, treatment and care in an atmosphere of hope and optimism.
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