Engagement in help-seeking of dual diagnosed mothers at a low-threshold service: grasping life through co-created opportunities

Advances in Dual Diagnosis,Volume 11, Issue 2, Page 88-100, May 2018. Purpose Mothers with a dual diagnosis (mental ill health and substance use) have delays in accessing services, or their care may be interrupted prior to therapeutic relationships being formed. The purpose of this paper is to explore and describe how engagement merges in the context of mothers with a dual diagnosis. Design/methodology/approach This is a qualitative, focused ethnographic study at a low-threshold service for substance abusing families. The data contain interviews, observations, field notes, and reflections. The analysis followed several systematic steps. Findings Engagement is the co-creation of possibilities between workplace staff and the client in different interfaces. It is not a single act, emotion, or verbal communication, but a complex intertwined system of events that can awaken or enable the client to get a grasp on life. The sensitivity of the worker is one tool for engaging the client in manifold ways in different interfaces: even the smallest events with connection are viewed as valuable. Engagement involves the intentional client in the process of interaction: the client needs to participate and become an acting and sensing part of the change, which occurs on an experiential level. The process is described with the metaphor of a seed. Originality/value Engagement as inner involvement challenges the current working methods, and requires sensitivity, because the mothers with a d...
Source: Advances in Dual Diagnosis - Category: Psychiatry Source Type: research
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