Alain Topor
University of Agder
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Publication
Featured researches published by Alain Topor.
International Journal of Social Psychiatry | 2009
Ulla-Karin Schön; Anne Denhov; Alain Topor
Background: Recovery research often describes recovery from mental illness as a complex individual process. In this article a social perspective on recovery is developed. Aims: To ascertain which factors people regard as decisive to their own recovery and what makes them beneficial. Methods: In-depth interviews were conducted with 58 persons in Sweden who had recovered from severe mental illness. Interviews were qualitatively analyzed using grounded theory. Results: Three dimensions of contributing recovery factors were identified. Social relationships emerged as the core category throughout these dimensions. Conclusions: The results show that recovery processes are social processes in which social relationships play a key role.
International Journal of Social Psychiatry | 2011
Alain Topor; Marit Borg; S. Di Girolamo; Larry Davidson
BACKGROUND Recent literature on recovery describes the process as deeply personal and unique to each individual. While there are aspects of recovery that are unique to each individual, this article argues that focusing solely on these overlooks the fact that recovery unfolds within a social and interpersonal context. MATERIALS Drawing from qualitative data, this article describes aspects of recovery that involve the contributions of others, the social environment and society. DISCUSSION These aspects of recovery include relationships, adequate material conditions and responsive services and supports. CONCLUSION The authors consider the implications of these social factors for transforming psychiatric research and theory as well as for recovery-orientated practice.
Archives of Andrology | 2006
Alain Topor; Marit Borg; Roberto Mezzina; Dave Sells; Izabel Marin; Larry Davidson
Relationships have a tremendous impact on how people recover from schizophrenia. Previous research has focused on the role of clinicians in these supportive relationships, but the current study finds that these relationships can occur within the mental health system, the family, or out in the community. Regardless, it is very important for people in recovery to feel as if they are supported and cared for. In qualitative interviews, we examine the specific aspects that characterize other peoples actions when helping in the recovery process. First, for both professionals and family members, being “there” and available seemed to help people in recovery. Secondly, people helped by doing more than was expected of them, sometimes by lending money or doing something extra to help out the person in recovery. Thirdly, people helped by doing something different than what was expected of them. For professionals, this might mean that they break a minor rule. These factors helped people in recovery feel like they were special, chosen, and “worth” doing something extra for. #Affiliation reflects lend author
Archives of Andrology | 2006
Roberto Mezzina; Larry Davidson; Marit Borg; Izabel Marin; Alain Topor; Dave Sells
This article provides an interpretation of the key issues that emerged from the research, attempting a possible synthesis of the different themes described in the other papers and beginning a map of recovery as an ongoing interpersonal and social process. From a subjective point of view, there is a dimension of ‘social experience’, which implies the reconstruction of self and the importance of social life as a major goal. Recovery as an interactive journey requires an entire social context ‘provided with meanings’, rather than simply building social ties and relationships within a network. Socialization in a real environment means social inclusion, like efforts made of gaining the status of effective citizenship, in terms of rights, opportunities, and responses to social needs. Therefore, what citizenship is really about seems to be ‘recovery in a social context’. In this framework, a community service can act as a sort of mediator, an agent for integration, recognizing the uniqueness of those processes. #Affiliation reflects lead author.
International Journal of Social Psychiatry | 2012
Anne Denhov; Alain Topor
Background: The quality of the relationship between professional and user is one of the important factors in the recovery process. However, more knowledge is needed concerning the components of helping relationships and characteristics of the helping professional. The aim of this study was to explore users’ experiences of helping relationships with professionals. Data and methods: This was a grounded theory analysis of 71 qualitative interviews to explore users’ experience of helping relationships and their components, in psychiatric care in Sweden. Discussion: Within the three main categories – interpersonal continuity, emotional climate and social interaction – two core themes were found that described vital components of helping relationships: a non-stigmatizing attitude on the part of the professionals and their willingness to do something beyond established routines. Conclusions: The focus in psychiatric treatment research needs to be broadened. In addition to research on the outcome of particular methods and interventions, the common factors also need to be investigated, above all, what is the effect of the quality of the relationship between user and professional. Greater attention needs to be paid, as well, to how helping respective obstructive relationships in psychiatric services arise, are maintained or are modified.
Psychiatric Quarterly | 2015
Amanda Ljungberg; Anne Denhov; Alain Topor
Relationships with professionals have been shown to be helpful to persons with severe mental illness (SMI) in relation to a variety of services. In this article, we aimed to synthesize the available qualitative research to acquire a deepened understanding of what helpful relationships with professionals consists of, from the perspective of persons with SMI. To do this, we created a meta-ethnography of 21 studies, through which ten themes and an overarching interpretation were created. The findings show that helpful relationships with professionals are relationships where the persons with SMI get to spend time with professionals that they know and trust, who gives them access to resources, support, collaboration and valued interpersonal processes, which are allowed to transgress the boundaries of the professional relationship. The overarching interpretation shows that the relationship that persons with SMI form with professionals is a professional relationship as well as an interpersonal relationship. Both these dimensions entail actions and processes that can be helpful to persons with SMI. Therefore, it is important to recognize and acknowledge both the functional roles of service user and service provider, as well as the roles of two persons interacting with each other, in a manner that may go beyond the purview of the traditional professionalism. Furthermore, the helpful components of this relationship are determined by the individual preferences, needs and wishes of persons with SMI.
Journal of Phenomenological Psychology | 2004
Dave Sells; Alain Topor; Larry Davidson
The purpose of this paper was to provide an example from phenomenological research of moving from rich descriptive interview data to coherent revelatory descriptions employing empathic bridges within the narrative structure of storytelling. We used transcribed data from two interviews concerning recovery from severe mental illness: one with an American woman in her early thirties, and the other with a Swedish man in his mid-thirties. Five investigators analyzed the transcribed data into individual first-person narrative descriptions according to existing empirical phenomenological methods including an independent reading, identification of themes relevant to processes of recovery from severe mental illness, temporal ordering of themes meaningfully reflecting the sequence of the recounted events, and consensus development. Our findings support the use of empathic bridges as a methodological tool with the narrative structure of firstperson storytelling, as well as the viability and importance of employing this tool to better understand processes of recovery for persons with severe mental illness.
Psychosis | 2014
Alain Topor; Gunnel Andersson; Anne Denhov; Sara Holmqvist; Maria Mattson; Claes-Göran Stefansson; Per Bülow
In psychiatry, it is assumed that the social conditions of everyday life do not in themselves affect the severity of an individual’s mental ill health. Rather, the illness is the cause of problems that the individual meets in daily life. However, recent studies indicate that social factors can explain behavior that has ordinarily been regarded as symptoms of mental illness. The aim of the present study is to investigate how people with a psychosis diagnosis manage their economic difficulties. Nineteen persons with a psychosis diagnosis were interviewed on several occasions in the course of a follow-up study. The interviews were analyzed according to Grounded Theory. The present study shows that the persons had developed different rational ways of coping with economic strain: reducing their expenses, increasing their incomes or borrowing money and acquiring debts. Living under poverty negatively affects their possibility to acquire and maintain a social network and their sense of the self. The study contributes to our knowledge of the nature of psychosis and its relationship to the social context.
American Journal of Psychiatric Rehabilitation | 2012
Alain Topor; Anne Denhov
Research has shown the importance of the relationship between professionals and users for the outcome of interventions in psychiatry. The aim of this study is to analyze time as one factor in the development of working alliances. Fifty-eight persons in recovery from diagnosis of severe mental illness were interviewed about helping factors in their recovery process. Two aspects of time were considered to be of importance for the construction of working alliances: the quantity of time, that is, getting more time than expected during, between, and after the sessions; and the quality of time, that is, having undisturbed and focused time, the experience of being in the professional thoughts between the sessions and timing in ones life. Those experiences give the person a sense of being a real-life person and not an abstract patient, and this lays the groundwork for establishing a working alliance. The management of time is an important factor in the creation of a working alliance and should be given greater attention in the development of experience- and evidence-based practice.
Qualitative Social Work | 2013
Marit Borg; Marius Veseth; Per-Einar Binder; Alain Topor
Being in recovery from bipolar disorder involves work-related concerns. The specific aims of this study are to: 1) understand the role of work in recovery from bipolar disorders, and 2) understand how people with such disorders deal with work-related challenges. These topics are examined from the stance of the recovery process, in which work-related activities were explored. Semi-structured, qualitative interviews were conducted with persons who had experienced recovery from bipolar disorder. Analysis was performed through thematic and phenomenological analysis, with hermeneutic phenomenology and reflexive methodology as a framework. The findings are presented through the following themes: 1) many types of work – finding meaning and a focus; 2) helpful roles and contexts – to be much more than a person with an illness; 3) making work possible – the role of supportive relationships and supportive medications, and 4) the costs of working too much – finding a meaningful and healthy balance.