1. Mental health practice and the rhetoric–reality gap.
- Author
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Skidmore, D., Warne, T., and Stark, S.
- Subjects
MENTAL health ,PSYCHIATRY ,NURSING ,MEDICAL personnel ,SURVEYS ,QUESTIONNAIRES - Abstract
SKIDMORE D., WARNE T. & STARK S. (2004) Journal of Psychiatric and Mental Health Nursing 11, 348–356 Mental health practice and the rhetoric–reality gap This paper had its genesis in a national project, sponsored by the English National Board for Nursing, Midwifery and Health Visiting, to explore team working within mental health practice. The project extended over a 2-year period and utilized various methods of data collection. However, this paper focused on data, from the national survey and informal interviews (based in eight regions), that addressed specific issues within the practitioner group. Of the 800 questionnaires sent out 26% were returned. Fifty-three percent of the returns were from practitioners, 14% user/carers and 33% educationalists. Our focus was that of the practitioners. This group had a response rate of 50% (i.e. 50% of the surveys sent out to practitioners were returned). A content analysis of 100 interviews was used to triangulate the data. Whilst the original brief was to explore team working the survey also highlighted data that indicated a common understanding of what mental health practitioners do and what they say they do and that, although there was a commonality of vocabulary, different practices existed between and within regions. This is the focus of this paper. We argue, from our findings, that different practice is a result of ‘habitus’. Whilst practitioners reported that they subscribe to a national agreement of meaning, there is a rhetoric–reality gap: that which is said to be done is not what is, in fact, practised. At the local level we argue that working within the habitus (educationally) can address the rhetoric–reality gap. However, we recommend further studies in order to explore how working within the habitus can address this matter across regions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
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