The impact of a short-term cohousing initiative among schizophrenia patients, high school students, and their social context: A qualitative case study.

Domingo Palacios-Ceña, Emilio Andrés Martín-Tejedor, Ana Elías-Elispuru, Amaia Garate-Samaniego, Jorge Pérez-Corrales, Elena García-García
Author Information
  1. Domingo Palacios-Ceña: Department of Physical Therapy, Occupational Therapy, Rehabilitation and Physical Medicine, Rey Juan Carlos University, Alcorcón, Madrid, Spain. ORCID
  2. Emilio Andrés Martín-Tejedor: Hospital Psiquiátrico San Juan de Dios Arrasate-Mondragón, Hermanos de San Juan de Dios, Arrasate, Spain.
  3. Ana Elías-Elispuru: Hospital Psiquiátrico San Juan de Dios Arrasate-Mondragón, Hermanos de San Juan de Dios, Arrasate, Spain.
  4. Amaia Garate-Samaniego: Hospital Psiquiátrico San Juan de Dios Arrasate-Mondragón, Hermanos de San Juan de Dios, Arrasate, Spain.
  5. Jorge Pérez-Corrales: Department of Physical Therapy, Occupational Therapy, Rehabilitation and Physical Medicine, Rey Juan Carlos University, Alcorcón, Madrid, Spain.
  6. Elena García-García: Department of Research, Fundación San Juan de Dios, Madrid, Spain.

Abstract

BACKGROUND: A number of programs have been developed to promote the contact between adolescents and mentally-ill patients, in order to break the stigma, improve understanding, promote mental health and prevent substance abuse. The aim of this study was to describe the experience of patients with schizophrenia, high school students, and their social context, participating in a short-term cohousing initiative.
METHODS: A qualitative case-study approach was implemented. Patients with schizophrenia from the San Juan de Dios Psychiatric Hospital, female students from Almen High School, and participants from their social context (parents, hospital staff, and teachers) were included, using purposeful sampling. Data were collected from 51 participants (15 patients, nine students, 11 hospital staff, six teachers, 10 parents) via non-participant observation, focus groups, informal interviews, researchers' field notes and patients' personal diaries and letters. A thematic analysis was performed.
RESULTS: The themes identified included a) learning to live together: students and patients participate and learn together; b) the perception of the illness and the mentally-ill: the barrier between health and disease is very slim, and society tends to avoid contact with those who are ill; c) change: a transformation takes place in students, in their self-perception, based on the real and intense nature of the experience; d) a trial and an opportunity: patients test their ability to live outside the hospital; e) discharge and readmission: discharge is experienced as both a liberation and a difficulty, whereas relapse and readmission are experienced as failures.
CONCLUSIONS: Our findings can help us to better understand schizophrenia and encourage a more positive approach towards both the illness and those who suffer from it. These results may be used for the development of cohousing programs in controlled environments.

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MeSH Term

Adolescent
Adult
Attitude to Health
Female
Health Personnel
Housing
Humans
Interviews as Topic
Learning
Male
Middle Aged
Parents
Perception
Personnel, Hospital
Qualitative Research
Schizophrenia
Schizophrenic Psychology
School Teachers
Self Concept
Social Environment
Students

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0patientsstudentsschizophreniasocialcohousinghospitalprogramspromotecontacthealthstudyexperiencehighschoolcontextshort-terminitiativequalitativeapproachparticipantsparentsstaffteachersincludedliveillnessdischargeexperiencedBACKGROUND:numberdevelopedadolescentsmentally-illorderbreakstigmaimproveunderstandingmentalpreventsubstanceabuseaimdescribeparticipatingMETHODS:case-studyimplementedPatientsSanJuandeDiosPsychiatricHospitalfemaleAlmenHighSchoolusingpurposefulsamplingDatacollected5115nine11six10vianon-participantobservationfocusgroupsinformalinterviewsresearchers'fieldnotespatients'personaldiarieslettersthematicanalysisperformedRESULTS:themesidentifiedlearningtogether:participatelearntogetherbperceptionmentally-ill:barrierdiseaseslimsocietytendsavoidillcchange:transformationtakesplaceself-perceptionbasedrealintensenaturedtrialopportunity:testabilityoutsideereadmission:liberationdifficultywhereasrelapsereadmissionfailuresCONCLUSIONS:findingscanhelpusbetterunderstandencouragepositivetowardssufferresultsmayuseddevelopmentcontrolledenvironmentsimpactamongcontext:case

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