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Featured researches published by Laetitia Zeeman.


Health | 2012

The resilient subject: Exploring subjectivity, identity and the body in narratives of resilience

Kay Aranda; Laetitia Zeeman; Julie Scholes; Arantxa Santa-María Morales

International research and policy interest in resilience has increased enormously during the last decade. Resilience is now considered to be a valuable asset or resource with which to promote health and well-being and forms part of a broader trend towards strength based as opposed to deficit models of health. And while there is a developing critique of resilience’s conceptual limits and normative assumptions, to date there is less discussion of the subject underpinning these notions, nor related issues of subjectivity, identity or the body. Our aim in this article is to begin to address this gap. We do so by re-examining the subject within two established narratives of resilience, as ‘found’ and ‘made’. We then explore the potential of a third narrative, which we term resilience ‘unfinished’. This latter story is informed by feminist poststructural understandings of the subject, which in turn, resonate with recently articulated understandings of an emerging psychosocial subject and the contribution of psychoanalysis to these debates. We then consider the potential value of this poststructural, performative and embodied psychosocial subject and discuss the implications for resilience theory, practice and research.


Journal of Psychiatric and Mental Health Nursing | 2011

An analysis of discourses shaping mental health practitioners.

Laetitia Zeeman; L. Simons

A mental health practitioner (MHP) role was introduced to health services in southern England in 2003. The paper will discuss the initial phase within a longitudinal research study. A discursive approach will be adopted in order to understand how healthcare discourses constrain and provide possibilities for the emergence of a new worker role in mental health. The manner in which MHPs understand and talk about their work is socially constructed in interaction and constantly being modified by competing discourses. This paper will analyse three overarching health discourses, namely, the biomedical, person-centred and psychological discourses that have shaped MHP trainees. Discourses intersect to inform the role, where practices of nursing, psychology, medicine and occupational therapy are combined. Thus, the inclusion of physical, psychological and person-centred components of care serve as a multifaceted approach to care. This form of interprofessionalism leads MHPs one step closer in the advance towards an interdisciplinary discourse of holistic care.


Journal of Youth Studies | 2017

Promoting resilience and emotional wellbeing of transgender young people: research at the intersections of gender and sexuality

Laetitia Zeeman; Kay Aranda; Nigel Sherriff; Christopher Cocking

ABSTRACT Within lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) research there is increasing health-related scholarship on trans lives, with a growing awareness of the impact of health inequalities on trans well-being. The aim of the paper is to provide greater understanding of transgender young people’s views of what is needed to promote their emotional well-being and resilience by undertaking specific analysis of data collected as part of wider research with young people (n = 97). The study utilised participatory qualitative methods with a cross sectional design generating data via a focus group with trans youth (n = 5), followed by thematic analysis. Findings suggest that both individual and collective capacities or resources enable and sustain resilience and well-being for trans young people. The adversity trans youth face is present in school, the community and in healthcare, but they are able to find places where they feel safe and connected to others. Practitioners, teachers and school nurses are well positioned to facilitate structural change in alliance with trans youth to promote resilience. Research results were utilised to inform health improvement, commissioning and service delivery.


Journal of Psychiatric and Mental Health Nursing | 2008

New ways of working: how mental health practitioners perceive their training and role

J. Brown; L. Simons; Laetitia Zeeman

This paper outlines advances in the mental health workforce by detailing the development, education and training of graduates from the social sciences in mental health practice. The mental health practitioner (MHP) programme is a partnership between higher education and the National Health Service to provide graduates with a new point of entry into the mental health workforce. The MHP is a new role in mental health i.e. in principle, trans-disciplinary, traversing psychology, nursing and occupational therapy. The role is informed by a bio-psychosocial philosophy of collaborative mental health care and therefore acts as a bridge between the different professions that constitute a multidisciplinary team on acute inpatient units and in the community. However, MHPs form part of the nursing team and work most closely with mental health nurses. They see their role as linked to, but other than, nursing. This paper will discuss the development of this programme and its philosophy of care, and will present outcome research on trainee perceptions and experiences of occupying the MHP role in mental health. It will present findings from the first stage of a longitudinal study (employing interviews and survey data) about trainee perceptions of their role and training before the programme commenced, 6 months into their training and at graduation.


Nurse Education Today | 2015

Queering the relationship between evidence-based mental health and psychiatric diagnosis: some implications for international mental health nurse curricular development

Alec Grant; Laetitia Zeeman; Kay Aranda

This is a scholarly work based on Queer theoretical principles, with implictions for international mental health nurse curricular development.


Health: An Interdisciplinary Journal for the Social Study of Health, Illness and Medicine | 2018

Exploring young people’s emotional well-being and resilience in educational contexts: A resilient space?

Christopher Cocking; Nigel Sherriff; Kay Aranda; Laetitia Zeeman

The term ‘resilience’ is pervasive in narratives of young people’s emotional well-being. However, the meaning it has for those it describes is perhaps less well understood. Resilience was investigated as part of an engagement exercise into health improvement commissioning in educational contexts in the South East of England. One hundred and nine young people in total were involved, and this article reports data collected from two areas that were explored, comprising a sub-set of 58 participants: emotional well-being and resilience (n = 23) and the whole school approach (n = 35). It was apparent that while not all participants engaged with the term ‘resilience’ itself, they nevertheless often adopted creative individual and collective strategies to protect and enhance their emotional well-being. Furthermore, participants reported a sense of resilience that arose from a shared sense of adversity that helped strengthen collective support and solidarity, thus supporting previous work on emergent collective resilience. Theoretical and practical implications are discussed, along with a recommendation for more participatory research, so that young people can be more confident that their views are being considered within such exercises.


Education 3-13 | 2002

An introduction to a postmodern approach to educational research: Discourse analysis

Laetitia Zeeman; Marie Poggenpoel; Cph Myburgh; N. Van der Linde


The Qualitative Report | 2012

Whose Story Is It? An Autoethnography Concerning Narrative Identity

Alec Grant; Laetitia Zeeman


Nursing Inquiry | 2014

Queer challenges to evidence‐based practice

Laetitia Zeeman; Kay Aranda; Alec Grant


Mental Health Practice | 2016

Depathologising sexualities in mental health services

Alec Grant; Jaime Naish; Laetitia Zeeman

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Kay Aranda

University of Brighton

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Alec Grant

University of Brighton

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