Being in a process of transition to psychosis, as narrated by adults with psychotic illnesses acutely admitted to hospital
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/10423Date
2014-05-01Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
To assist in improving early interventions for psychosis, this study explored how adult
people narrated their experience of becoming psychotic, and how contact with mental
health personnel was established. Narrative interviews were conducted with 12 participants
with psychotic illnesses recruited from acute psychiatric wards. The interviews
were content analysed. Participants described being in a process of transition to
psychosis as follows: experiencing changes as well-known signs of psychosis, experiencing
sudden unexpected changes as signs of psychosis and experiencing unidentified
changes as signs of illness. Our results show that participants and their close others
who knew the signs of psychosis established a dialogue with mental health personnel
and were better equipped to prevent and mitigate the psychosis. Our results demonstrate
that participants who did not perceive the signs of psychosis and did not have
other people to advocate for them were at risk for delayed treatment, poor communication
and coercive interventions. Furthermore, participants who did not know the
signs of psychosis perceived these changes as deterioration in their health and awareness
of illness.We suggest that participants’ experiential knowledge of transitioning to
psychosis and an awareness of illness can be used to improve the communication
during interventions for psychosis.