“Walking Together Towards Freedom.” Patients’ Lived Experiences of Participation in Outpatient Forensic Care
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/23440Date
2021-11-11Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
There is a general agreement regarding the significance of patient participation in care. In forensic
psychiatric care, however, this appears to be troublesome because of the paradoxical nature of
having responsibility; to give person-centered, recovery-oriented psychiatric care and to protect
society from potentially dangerous individuals. The aim of this study was to describe patients’
lived experiences of participation in outpatient forensic psychiatric care. Data were collected by
means of individual interviews with five patients. The phenomenological hermeneutical analysis
shed light on patient participation as having two dimensions. The outer dimension focuses on
participation as “doing” and as a means of developing the understanding and skills necessary for
being discharged from forensic care, while the inner dimension is related to “being” and experiences
of acceptance and inclusion in communion with other people. This emphasises the importance
of supporting patients’ experiences of being involved in everyday life together with others, even
in periods when patients’ possibilities to affect decisions regarding their care are limited.
Publisher
Taylor & FrancisCitation
Anni, Wiklund Gustin. “Walking Together Towards Freedom.” Patients’ Lived Experiences of Participation in Outpatient Forensic Care. Issues in Mental Health Nursing. 2021:1-9Metadata
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