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Title: Understanding the milieu experiences of patients on an acute inpatient psychiatric unit. Author: Thibeault CA, Trudeau K, d'Entremont M, Brown T. Journal: Arch Psychiatr Nurs; 2010 Aug; 24(4):216-26. PubMed ID: 20650367. Abstract: The role of inpatient mental health units is changing. Increasingly, people with acute and severe mental illness are admitted for short periods of intense treatment and are discharged quickly to community-based care. Reduction in average lengths of stay for psychiatric inpatients has been accompanied by a marginalization of the concept of therapeutic milieu in the mental health discourse. This phenomenological inquiry focuses on understanding the life-world of six people with acute psychiatric illness who were hospitalized on an acute inpatient psychiatric unit. Working together, a team of four, including mental health clinicians and consumers, developed and implemented this interpretive study using the phenomenology of Heidegger and Taylor. The principle investigator conducted the interviews, and the research team engaged in a complex interpretive process, reviewing narrative accounts, exploring personal meanings and key themes, and reconstructing shared meaning as lived and shared by participants. In this report, the authors describe patient experiences of a rule-bound, controlling, and sometimes oppressive milieu while highlighting patient experiences of healing and health as lived within that same milieu. The authors describe patients' embodied, dialectical, and often paradoxical experiences of fear and affirmation, alienation and connection, and abandonment and healing. The authors share selected narrative accounts to generate new understanding of patient experiences and suggest that the inpatient psychiatric milieu remains an important but often neglected component of psychiatric treatment.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]