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Identifying and describing patients’ learning experiences towards self-management of bipolar disorders: a phenomenological study

Identifying and describing patients’ learning experiences towards self-management of bipolar disorders: a phenomenological study
Identifying and describing patients’ learning experiences towards self-management of bipolar disorders: a phenomenological study
Existing evidence suggest that self-management education of bipolar disorder (BD) is effective. However, why outcomes differ across the full range of service users has not been examined. This study describes learning experiences of service users in self-managing BD that provide a possible explanation for this varying effectiveness. We have conducted a phenomenological study via face-to-face, in-depth interviews, guided by a topic list, along service users with BD I or II (n = 16) in three specialised community care clinics across the Netherlands. Interviews were digitally recorded and transcribed verbatim prior to analysis in Atlas.ti 7. Unlike existing studies, which suggest that individual abilities of service users determine outcomes in self-management of BD, the current study found that self-management of BD is a learning process that takes place in a collaborative network. We identified five categories: acknowledgment of having BD, processing the information load, illness management, reflecting on living with BD, and self-management of BD. The success of self-management depends on the acknowledgment of individual limitations in learning to cope with BD and willingness to use a social network as a back-up instead. Especially, the dormant fear of a recurrent episode is a hampering factor in this learning process.
bipolar disorders, community mental health services, learning experiences, phenomenology, qualitative research, self-management
1351-0126
Van den Heuvel, S.C.G.H.
138f0875-e264-45b0-a26c-7271931e06f4
Goossens, P.J.J.
12107361-08fc-4c4d-8903-096074e40db5
Terlouw, C.
69d2d418-4945-49df-b0b1-4486d4568978
Van Achterberg, T.
1b413585-49b3-4989-a1b6-7fb4d4bac453
Schoonhoven, Lisette
46a2705b-c657-409b-b9da-329d5b1b02de
Van den Heuvel, S.C.G.H.
138f0875-e264-45b0-a26c-7271931e06f4
Goossens, P.J.J.
12107361-08fc-4c4d-8903-096074e40db5
Terlouw, C.
69d2d418-4945-49df-b0b1-4486d4568978
Van Achterberg, T.
1b413585-49b3-4989-a1b6-7fb4d4bac453
Schoonhoven, Lisette
46a2705b-c657-409b-b9da-329d5b1b02de

Van den Heuvel, S.C.G.H., Goossens, P.J.J., Terlouw, C., Van Achterberg, T. and Schoonhoven, Lisette (2015) Identifying and describing patients’ learning experiences towards self-management of bipolar disorders: a phenomenological study. Journal of Psychiatric and Mental Health Nursing. (doi:10.1111/jpm.12243). (PMID:26172454)

Record type: Article

Abstract

Existing evidence suggest that self-management education of bipolar disorder (BD) is effective. However, why outcomes differ across the full range of service users has not been examined. This study describes learning experiences of service users in self-managing BD that provide a possible explanation for this varying effectiveness. We have conducted a phenomenological study via face-to-face, in-depth interviews, guided by a topic list, along service users with BD I or II (n = 16) in three specialised community care clinics across the Netherlands. Interviews were digitally recorded and transcribed verbatim prior to analysis in Atlas.ti 7. Unlike existing studies, which suggest that individual abilities of service users determine outcomes in self-management of BD, the current study found that self-management of BD is a learning process that takes place in a collaborative network. We identified five categories: acknowledgment of having BD, processing the information load, illness management, reflecting on living with BD, and self-management of BD. The success of self-management depends on the acknowledgment of individual limitations in learning to cope with BD and willingness to use a social network as a back-up instead. Especially, the dormant fear of a recurrent episode is a hampering factor in this learning process.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 12 May 2015
e-pub ahead of print date: 14 July 2015
Keywords: bipolar disorders, community mental health services, learning experiences, phenomenology, qualitative research, self-management
Organisations: Faculty of Health Sciences

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 380946
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/380946
ISSN: 1351-0126
PURE UUID: 4bae9fa0-c50f-4cb8-9095-4a03a2033508
ORCID for Lisette Schoonhoven: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-7129-3766

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 21 Sep 2015 13:43
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:41

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Contributors

Author: S.C.G.H. Van den Heuvel
Author: P.J.J. Goossens
Author: C. Terlouw
Author: T. Van Achterberg

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