----- 心理疾病患者的恢复: 哲学和相关观点
Preface: background and overview About the authors Overview of Chapter 1 1. Introduction SECTION 1: FIRST PERSON ACCOUNTS IN RELATION TO RECOVERY 2. Life beyond psychiatry 3. A wellness approach to mental health recovery 4. Families and patients with mental illness - on the recovery road SECTION 2: HISTORICAL, EPISTEMOLOGICAL AND METAPHYSICAL ASPECTS OF RECOVERY OF PEOPLE WITH MENTAL ILLNESS 5. Benevolence and discipline: the concept of recovery in early 19th century moral treatment 6. The epistemological basis of personal recovery 7. Contrasting conceptualizations of recovery imply distinct research methodology 8. Cultural contexts and constructions of recovery 9. Recovery and hope in relation to schizophrenia 10. Recovery, narrative theory and generative madness 11. From being subjected to being a subject: recovery in relation to schizophrenia SECTION 3: JUSTICE AND OTHER ETHICAL ASPECTS OF RECOVERY OF PEOPLE WITH MENTAL ILLNESS 12. Some social science antinomies and their implications for the recovery-oriented approach to mental illness and psychiatric rehabilitation 13. Recovery and the partitioning of scientific authority in psychiatry 14. Being ill and getting better: recovery and accounts of disorder 15. Is recovery a model? 16. Considering recovery as a process: or, life is not an outcome 17. Recovery and stigma: issues of social justice 18. Recovery and advocacy: contextualising justice in relation to recovery from mental illness in East Asia 19. Ethical and related practical issues faced by recovery-oriented mental health care providers: a risk-benefit analysis
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