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Living with schizophrenia and atypical medication

Gill, A; Morrall, P; Knapp, P

Authors

A Gill

P Morrall

P Knapp



Abstract

Background
There is no available evidence providing detailed and valid accounts of how people with schizophrenia construct meaning in their lives.

Aim
To explore the lived experiences of people with schizophrenia who had been prescribed atypical antipsychotic medications.

Methods
Adopting a phenomenological approach, a purposive sample of 19 adults with schizophrenia provided data using a combination of daily diaries and individual face-to-face interviews.

Findings
Five core themes were evident in the data: social isolation, stigma, quality of life, confidence and social networks. The findings provide a distinctive, enlightening and encouraging insight into how people diagnosed with schizophrenia live their lives.

Conclusion
Participants reported a loss of identity and control over their lives and they said that stigma continues to have a detrimental effect on their lived experiences. However, despite these impairments, many of the participants managed to integrate themselves into the community and participate in meaningful activities associated with everyday living.

Citation

Gill, A., Morrall, P., & Knapp, P. (2016). Living with schizophrenia and atypical medication. Mental Health Practice, 19(5), 12-19. https://doi.org/10.7748/mhp.19.5.12.s16

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Sep 28, 2015
Publication Date Feb 10, 2016
Deposit Date Feb 3, 2020
Journal Mental Health Practice
Print ISSN 1465-8720
Electronic ISSN 2047-895X
Publisher RCN Publishing
Volume 19
Issue 5
Pages 12-19
DOI https://doi.org/10.7748/mhp.19.5.12.s16
Publisher URL https://doi.org/10.7748/mhp.19.5.12.s16
Related Public URLs https://journals.rcni.com/mental-health-practice