I would love to hear more - how did you start and how did you organise? - was it friends and neighbours getting to gether to deal with a local issue?
What does 'recovery orientated values' mean?
'assess needs, plan, implement & evaluate' is self explanitory but sounds very much like management jargon to me - what do you mean?
You mention an organisation that you work for - are you/your group paid or funded to organise things?
I'm having trouble seeing how national or local issues can be tackled - how to look at the problems ahead in any positive way? I'm seeing plenty of local opposition to local issues but no 'community empowerment'.
assess, plan, implement, and evaluate aren't managerial jargon
they form the basis of changing something that looks huge and too hard into small achievable goals. its used in nursing, setting up community projects, changing policies etc...with out assessing the needs you can't make plans,implement them, and achieve then evaluate how you did. it provides a matrix for change
Recovery orientated values come from recovery focused mental health practice. I've found that using and promoting these values whilst trying to improve the health of a local community work really well. below it explains how these principles work for an individual. but replace the individual with community and you'll see what i'm getting at? recovery is about empowerment and hope.
1. Uniqueness of the individual
Recovery oriented mental health practice:
- recognises that recovery is not necessarily about cure but is about having opportunities for choices and living a meaningful, satisfying and purposeful life, and being a valued member of the community
- accepts that recovery outcomes are personal and unique for each individual and go beyond an exclusive health focus to include an emphasis on social inclusion and quality of life
- empowers individuals so they recognise that they are at the centre of the care they receive.Top of page
2. Real choices
Recovery oriented mental health practice:
- supports and empowers individuals to make their own choices about how they want to lead their lives and acknowledges choices need to be meaningful and creatively explored
- supports individuals to build on their strengths and take as much responsibility for their lives as they can
- ensures that there is a balance between duty of care and support for individuals to take positive risks and make the most of new opportunities.
3. Attitudes and rights
Recovery oriented mental health practice:
- involves listening to, learning from and acting upon communications from the individual and their carers about what is important to the individual
- promotes and protects an individual’s legal, citizenship and human rights
- supports individuals to maintain and develop social, recreational, occupational and vocational activities which are meaningful to them
- instils hope in an individual about their future and ability to live a meaningful life.
4. Dignity and respect
Recovery oriented mental health practice:
- involves being courteous, respectful and honest in all interactions
- involves sensitivity and respect for each individual, especially for their values, beliefs and culture
- challenges discrimination wherever it exists within our own services or the broader community.Top of page
5. Partnership and communication
Recovery oriented mental health practice:
- acknowledges that each individual is an expert on their own life and that recovery involves working in partnership with individuals and their carers to provide support in a way that makes sense to them
- values the importance of sharing relevant information and the need to communicate clearly
- involves working in positive and realistic ways with individuals and their carers to help them realise their own hopes, goals and aspirations.
6. Evaluating recovery
Recovery oriented mental health practice ensures and enables continuous evaluation at several levels:
- Individuals and their carers can track their own progress.
- Services demonstrate that they use the individual’s experiences of care to inform quality improvement activities.
- The mental health system reports on key outcomes that indicate recovery. These outcomes include housing, employment, education, social and family relationships, health and well being.
1. Uniqueness of the individual
Recovery oriented mental health practice:
- recognises that recovery is not necessarily about cure but is about having opportunities for choices and living a meaningful, satisfying and purposeful life, and being a valued member of the community
- accepts that recovery outcomes are personal and unique for each individual and go beyond an exclusive health focus to include an emphasis on social inclusion and quality of life
- empowers individuals so they recognise that they are at the centre of the care they receive.Top of page
2. Real choices
Recovery oriented mental health practice:
- supports and empowers individuals to make their own choices about how they want to lead their lives and acknowledges choices need to be meaningful and creatively explored
- supports individuals to build on their strengths and take as much responsibility for their lives as they can
- ensures that there is a balance between duty of care and support for individuals to take positive risks and make the most of new opportunities.
3. Attitudes and rights
Recovery oriented mental health practice:
- involves listening to, learning from and acting upon communications from the individual and their carers about what is important to the individual
- promotes and protects an individual’s legal, citizenship and human rights
- supports individuals to maintain and develop social, recreational, occupational and vocational activities which are meaningful to them
- instils hope in an individual about their future and ability to live a meaningful life.
4. Dignity and respect
Recovery oriented mental health practice:
- involves being courteous, respectful and honest in all interactions
- involves sensitivity and respect for each individual, especially for their values, beliefs and culture
- challenges discrimination wherever it exists within our own services or the broader community.Top of page
5. Partnership and communication
Recovery oriented mental health practice:
- acknowledges that each individual is an expert on their own life and that recovery involves working in partnership with individuals and their carers to provide support in a way that makes sense to them
- values the importance of sharing relevant information and the need to communicate clearly
- involves working in positive and realistic ways with individuals and their carers to help them realise their own hopes, goals and aspirations.
6. Evaluating recovery
Recovery oriented mental health practice ensures and enables continuous evaluation at several levels:
- Individuals and their carers can track their own progress.
- Services demonstrate that they use the individual’s experiences of care to inform quality improvement activities.
- The mental health system reports on key outcomes that indicate recovery. These outcomes include housing, employment, education, social and family relationships, health and well being.
and yes, atm i work for a large humanitarian organisation. its my job to promote empowerment, independence, meaningful activity, relationships. inclusion and hope for individuals, groups, communities. if you assist to give people back their dignity, confidence, validate their feelings of being trampled on by the government, endorse their instincts... their basic human morals, then this is what (ime) starts the changes from the grass roots up. I've enabled an amazing support network of people who as well as caring and being there for each other, are just gathering momentum with speaking out and organising rallies and marches and protests. Meeting like minded others has given them the strength and justification to be heard. ime people who are 'down trodden' won't fight for themselves but will fight for other people who they come to form good relationships with