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Journal Article

Citation

Lindgren BM, Oster I, Aström S, Hällgren Graneheim U. Int. J. Qual. Stud. Health Well-Being 2011; 6(ePub): ePub.

Affiliation

Department of Nursing, Umeå University, Umeå, Sweden.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2011, Co-Action Pub.)

DOI

10.3402/qhw.v6i3.7254

PMID

21897829

PMCID

PMC3166521

Abstract

The aim of the study was to illuminate interpretative repertoires that jointly construct the interaction between adult women who self-harm and professional caregivers in psychiatric inpatient care. Participant observations and informal interviews were conducted among six women who self-harm and their professional caregivers in two psychiatric inpatient wards, and analysed using the concept of interpretative repertoires from the discipline of discursive psychology. The analysis revealed four interpretative repertoires that jointly constructed the interaction. The professional caregivers used a "fostering repertoire" and a "supportive repertoire" and the women who self-harmed used a "victim repertoire" and an "expert repertoire." The women and the caregivers were positioned and positioned themselves and people around them within and among these interpretative repertoires to make sense of their experiences of the interaction. It was necessary to consider each woman's own life chances and knowledge about herself and her needs. The participants made it clear that it was essential for them to be met with respect as individuals. Professional caregivers need to work in partnership with individuals who self-harm-experts by profession collaborating with experts by experience. Caregivers need to look beyond behavioural symptoms and recognise each individual's possibilities for agency.


Language: en

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