The Burden of Psychiatric Disability to Chronically Poor Households: Part 2 Coping Strategies
Abstract
Studies in occupational therapy on the strategies which people with psychiatric disability and their households use to navigate the daily struggle for survival in the context of chronic poverty are rare. This qualitative study, published in two separate parts, identified multiple layers of action, reaction and interaction used by everyone in the household to cope with the demands of daily subsistence including the costs of psychiatric disability. Major organising ideas centred on the discursive social forces that shaped people’s daily activities, tasks and roles. While poverty aggravates the precarious situation of mentally ill individuals and their households, they mobilise coping strategies by drawing on locally relevant ways of knowing and ‘being-in-the-world’. Socially engaged occupational therapy, cognisant of the cost burden of psychiatric disability, could work towards enhancing individual and household resilience through occupation focussed interventions that strengthen self-action and inter-action within indigenous explanatory frameworks.
Key words: poverty, psychiatric disability, coping strategies, relational econo
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