What is it about?
A person with a psychiatric history shares her experience of finding and sustaining employment in the aftermath of a mental health episode. Chan Li Shan speaks of what it means to grapple with severe mental illness in a society where a person's worth is defined by their economic productivity.
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Why is it important?
Many people diagnosed with severe mental illness find it challenging to return to work and to find and sustain employment. This article provides an example of how this can be achieved, but noting that such stories need not be representative of all stories, and that it is important to work towards greater diversity and inclusion of stories that may not echo the dominant narrative. The publication of this article in Psychiatric Services, a journal of the American Psychiatric Association, speaks to the rising acknowledgement that the lived experience of persons with psychiatrist histories are more than anecdotal accounts, and that they should be recognised for their potential contribution to knowledge and are to be taken seriously.
Perspectives
Read the Original
This page is a summary of: On the Employment of Persons With Mental Health Issues, Psychiatric Services, August 2015, American Psychiatric Association,
DOI: 10.1176/appi.ps.660801.
You can read the full text:
Resources
Overcoming Stigma: How to do it
Transcript of Plenary Session (IIIB) of the Mental Health Association of Hong Kong's 65th Anniversary Symposium on Mental Health on 11th December 2019.
I Object: Mental Illness is not a Crime
An urgent piece published in 2024 about proposed amendments to laws that will give the police greater powers to arrest those who are “mentally disordered”.
A Philosopher's Madness
The author's book-length memoir of schizophrenia.
Contributors
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