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      Addressing Challenges in Residential Facilities: Promoting Human Rights and Recovery While Pursuing Functional Autonomy

      research-article
      , M.D., Ph.D. 1 , , , Clin. Psy. 2 , , Clin. Psy. 3 , , D.M. 4 , , Ph.D. 4 , , M.D., Ph.D. 3 , 4
      Psychiatric Research and Clinical Practice
      John Wiley and Sons Inc.

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          Abstract

          Objective

          Italian residential facilities (RFs) aim to promote human rights and recovery for individuals with severe mental disorders. Italian RFs can be distinguished into five main types: high‐intensity rehabilitation (RF1), medium‐intensity rehabilitation (RF2), medium‐level support (RF3.1), high‐level support (RF3.2), low‐level support (RF3.3). This study aimed to assess the effectiveness of Italian RFs in achieving functional autonomy while upholding human rights and recovery.

          Methods

          Data on socio‐demographics, clinical information, patient and staff assessments of functional autonomy, types of interventions, and RF performance in various domains were collected in a pilot study with a cross‐sectional design. Descriptive and inferential analyses were conducted.

          Results

          Twelve RFs and 113 patients participated, with varying proportions in each RF type. RF1 patients were the oldest ( p < 0.001) with the lowest functional autonomy ( p < 0.001), while RF2 patients were the youngest ( p < 0.001) with the lowest hospitalization rate ( p < 0.001). RF3.1 patients had the highest employment rate ( p = 0.024), while RF3.2 had the lowest employment rate ( p = 0.024) and the longest service contact ( p < 0.001). RF3.3 users had the highest functional autonomy ( p < 0.001). The highest functional autonomy was in self‐care which received the highest focus in objectives and interventions. Patients rated their functional autonomy higher than professionals ( p < 0.001). RFs excelled in the “human rights” and “social interface” domains but performed poorly in “recovery‐based practice,” with RF1 having the lowest performance and RF3.3 the highest.

          Conclusions

          This pilot study suggests that Italian RFs generally aligne with their mission and human rights principles, but personalizing interventions and implementing recovery‐oriented practices face challenges.

          Highlights

          • Residential facilities (RFs) are not merely housing solutions but aim to help residents to be integrated into the community, and carry out significant activities in daily life.

          • The risk of perpetuating human rights violations and neglecting the recovery ethos remains a significant challenge in RFs.

          • Italian RFs generally align with their mission and human rights principles.

          • Challenges in Italian RFs include difficulties in personalizing interventions and implementing recovery‐oriented practices.

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          Most cited references34

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          Recovery from mental illness: The guiding vision of the mental health service system in the 1990s.

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            Illness management and recovery: a review of the research.

            Illness management is a broad set of strategies designed to help individuals with serious mental illness collaborate with professionals, reduce their susceptibility to the illness, and cope effectively with their symptoms. Recovery occurs when people with mental illness discover, or rediscover, their strengths and abilities for pursuing personal goals and develop a sense of identity that allows them to grow beyond their mental illness. The authors discuss the concept of recovery from psychiatric disorders and then review research on professional-based programs for helping people manage their mental illness. Research on illness management for persons with severe mental illness, including 40 randomized controlled studies, indicates that psychoeducation improves people's knowledge of mental illness; that behavioral tailoring helps people take medication as prescribed; that relapse prevention programs reduce symptom relapses and rehospitalizations; and that coping skills training using cognitive-behavioral techniques reduces the severity and distress of persistent symptoms. The authors discuss the implementation and dissemination of illness management programs from the perspectives of mental health administrators, program directors, people with a psychiatric illness, and family members.
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              The evidence-based group-level symptom-reduction model as the organizing principle for mental health care: time for change?

              The content and organization of mental health care have been heavily influenced by the view that mental difficulties come as diagnosable disorders that can be treated by specialist practitioners who apply evidence‐based practice (EBP) guidelines of symptom reduction at the group level. However, the EBP symptom‐reduction model is under pressure, as it may be disconnected from what patients need, ignores evidence of the trans‐syndromal nature of mental difficulties, overestimates the contribution of the technical aspects of treatment compared to the relational and ritual components of care, and underestimates the lack of EBP group‐to‐individual generalizability. A growing body of knowledge indicates that mental illnesses are seldom “cured” and are better framed as vulnerabilities. Important gains in well‐being can be achieved when individuals learn to live with mental vulnerabilities through a slow process of strengthening resilience in the social and existential domains. In this paper, we examine what a mental health service would look like if the above factors were taken into account. The mental health service of the 21st century may be best conceived of as a small‐scale healing community fostering connectedness and strengthening resilience in learning to live with mental vulnerability, complemented by a limited number of regional facilities. Peer support, organized at the level of a recovery college, may form the backbone of the community. Treatments should be aimed at trans‐syndromal symptom reduction, tailored to serve the higher‐order process of existential recovery and social participation, and applied by professionals who have been trained to collaborate, embrace idiography and maximize effects mediated by therapeutic relationship and the healing effects of ritualized care interactions. Finally, integration with a public mental health system of e‐communities providing information, peer and citizen support and a range of user‐rated self‐management tools may help bridge the gap between the high prevalence of common mental disorder and the relatively low capacity of any mental health service.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                amartinelli@fatebenefratelli.eu
                Journal
                Psychiatr Res Clin Pract
                Psychiatr Res Clin Pract
                10.1176/(ISSN)2575-5609
                RCP2
                Psychiatric Research and Clinical Practice
                John Wiley and Sons Inc. (Hoboken )
                2575-5609
                08 November 2023
                Spring 2024
                : 6
                : 1 ( doiID: 10.1176/rcp2.v6.1 )
                : 12-22
                Affiliations
                [ 1 ] IRCCS Istituto Centro San Giovanni di Dio Fatebenefratelli Brescia Italy
                [ 2 ] ICISS – Istituti Civici di Servizio Sociale Verona Italy
                [ 3 ] Section of Psychiatry Verona Hospital Trust AOUI Verona Italy
                [ 4 ] Dipartimento di Neuroscienze, Biomedicina e Movimento Università di Verona Verona Italy
                Author notes
                [*] [* ] Send correspondence

                to Dr. Martinelli

                ( amartinelli@ 123456fatebenefratelli.eu )

                Author information
                https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4430-0713
                Article
                RCP21078
                10.1176/appi.prcp.20230034
                10948939
                38510484
                42922a64-6fce-49f2-a10e-0a6ba8de67a9
                © 2023 The Authors. Psychiatric Research and Clinical Practice published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of American Psychiatric Association.

                This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ License, which permits use and distribution in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited, the use is non‐commercial and no modifications or adaptations are made.

                History
                : 12 September 2023
                : 10 July 2023
                : 03 October 2023
                Page count
                Figures: 1, Tables: 4, Pages: 11, Words: 7242
                Categories
                Article
                Articles
                Custom metadata
                2.0
                Spring 2024
                Converter:WILEY_ML3GV2_TO_JATSPMC version:6.3.9 mode:remove_FC converted:19.03.2024

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