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Review article

Mutual aid groups in psychiatry and substance misuse

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Pages 104-117 | Accepted 05 Feb 2008, Published online: 12 May 2008
 

Abstract

Background: Mutuality is a feature of many ‘self-help groups’ for people with mental health and/or substance misuse needs. These groups are diverse in terms of membership, aims, organisation and resources. Collectively, in terms of the pathways for seeking help, support, social capital or simply validation as people, mutual aid groups figure at some time in the life story of many psychiatric and/or substance misuse patients. From the viewpoint of clinical services, relations with such groups range from formal collaboration, through incidental shared care, via indifference, to incomprehension, suspicion, or even hostility. How should mental health and substance misuse clinicians relate to this informal care sector, in practice?

Aims: To synthesise knowledge about three aspects of the relationship between psychiatric/substance misuse services and mutual aid groups:

profile groups' engagement of people with mental health and/or substance misuse needs at all stages of vulnerability, illness or recovery;

characterise patterns of health benefit or harm to patients, where such outcome evidence exists;

identify features of mutual aid groups that distinguish them from clinical services.

Method: A search of both published and unpublished literature with a focus on reports of psychiatric and substance misuse referral routes and outcomes, compiled for meta-synthesis.

Results: Negative outcomes were found occasionally, but in general mutual aid group membership was repeatedly associated with positive benefits.

Conclusions: Greater awareness of this resource for mental health and substance misuse fields could enhance practice.

Notes

1. American Self-Help Clearinghouse – a keyword searchable database of … national, international models and self-help support groups … http//www.mentalhelp.net/selfhelp/

2. SHARMAN – a new collaborative national research network (1999). Originally supported by APU funding and held its first National Conference Framing a Future for Self-Help, chaired by Munn-Giddings, in June 2000. Other founder members were colleagues from the College of Health, Sheffield Hallam University and Self-Help Nottingham.

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