Abstract
Background/aim: People with severe mental illness (SMI) do not receive adequate attention in research or clinical practice. They are considered hard to reach and difficult to engage. Information is needed to help provide support for this vulnerable population. This paper aims to investigate the well-being of adults diagnosed with SMI and receiving Assertive Community Treatment (ACT) by applying the occupational well-being framework to the everyday activities of this vulnerable group of people.
Materials and methods: Eleven adults diagnosed with an SMI, living in the community, participated in semi-structured interviews over a 12-month period. A longitudinal design was used to collect data through using field notes and audio recordings. For this paper, secondary analysis was conducted by coding the data deductively thereby investigating the participants’ experiences in relation to the seven Occupational Well-being framework descriptors (accomplishment, affirmation, agency, coherence, companionship, pleasure and renewal).
Results: Participants’ everyday activities and occupational well-being appeared severely restricted and largely determined by the type of care they received. There was minimal evidence of the well-being descriptors, though all the participants reported experiencing some form of pleasure, even though some of the pleasurable experiences negatively impacted their health.
Conclusion/significance: The episodic nature of SMI means that people living with an SMI require continuity in key relationships and support to achieve Occupational Well-being. Occupational therapists working with mental health consumers need to facilitate the types of activities that foster well-being through accomplishment, affirmation, agency and companionship, and that derive pleasure in healthy and positive ways.
Acknowledgement
The authors wish to acknowledge Tim Parkin for assistance with transcription.
Disclosure statement
This content has not been published or submitted for publication elsewhere. All authors have contributed significantly and are in agreement with the content of the manuscript. They have taken due care to ensure the integrity of all aspects of it. To ensure participant anonymity, there is no identifying data within the content of this manuscript to identify participants.
Ethics approval
This research project was given Human Ethical Approval at Curtin University in Perth, Western Australia (reference number HR 134/2012) and Government of Western Australia, Department of Health (reference number 12/346) and conforms to the provisions of the Declaration of Helsinki. Informed consent was obtained from all participants prior to data collection.