Making the case for citizenship-oriented mental healthcare for youth in Canada

IF 1.6 Q3 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
G. Jordan, C. Mutschler, S. Kidd, M. Rowe, S. Iyer
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Abstract

Purpose Varying stakeholders have highlighted how recovery-oriented mental health services such as youth mental health services have traditionally focused on supporting individual resources to promote recovery (e.g., agency) to the exclusion of addressing structural issues that influence recovery (e.g. poverty). One response to this criticism has been work helping people with mental health problems recover a sense of citizenship and sense of belonging in their communities. Work on citizenship has yet to influence youth mental healthcare in Canada’s provinces and territories. This paper aims to highlight ways that youth mental healthcare can better help youth recover a sense of citizenship. Design/methodology/approach The arguments described in this paper were established through discussion and consensus among authors based on clinical experience in youth mental health and an understanding of Canada’s healthcare policy landscape, including current best practices as well as guidelines for recovery-oriented care by the Mental Health Commission of Canada. Findings Here, this study proposes several recommendations that can help young with mental health problems recover their sense of citizenship at the social, systems and service levels. These include addressing the social determinants of health; developing a citizenship-based system of care; addressing identity-related disparities; employing youth community health workers within services; adapting and delivering citizenship-based interventions; and connecting youth in care to civic-oriented organizations. Originality/value This paper provides the first discussion of how the concept of citizenship can be applied to youth mental health in Canada in multiple ways. The authors hope that this work provides momentum for adopting policies and practices that can help youth in Canada recover a sense of citizenship following a mental health crisis.
为加拿大青年提供以公民身份为导向的精神保健
目的:不同的利益攸关方强调,以康复为导向的心理健康服务,如青年心理健康服务,传统上侧重于支持个人资源促进康复(例如,机构),而不解决影响康复的结构性问题(例如,贫困)。对这种批评的一种回应是帮助有精神健康问题的人恢复公民意识和归属感。关于公民身份的工作尚未对加拿大各省和地区的青年心理保健产生影响。本文旨在强调青少年心理保健可以更好地帮助青少年恢复公民意识的方法。设计/方法/方法本文所述的论点是作者根据青年心理健康的临床经验和对加拿大医疗保健政策格局的了解,包括目前的最佳做法以及加拿大心理健康委员会以康复为导向的护理指导方针,通过讨论和达成共识而确立的。在此,本研究提出了一些建议,可以帮助有心理健康问题的年轻人在社会、系统和服务层面恢复他们的公民意识。其中包括处理健康的社会决定因素;发展以公民身份为基础的护理系统;解决与身份有关的差异;在服务范围内雇用青年社区卫生工作者;调整和提供基于公民身份的干预措施;并将青少年与民间组织联系起来。原创性/价值本文首次讨论了公民身份的概念如何以多种方式应用于加拿大的青少年心理健康。作者希望这项工作为采取政策和实践提供动力,帮助加拿大的年轻人在心理健康危机后恢复公民意识。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Journal of Public Mental Health
Journal of Public Mental Health PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH-
CiteScore
2.40
自引率
7.10%
发文量
32
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