From Patient to Therapatient: Social Work Students Coping With Mental Illness

Miriam Goldberg*, Noami Hadas-Lidor, Orit Karnieli-Miller

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

32 Scopus citations

Abstract

We explored the experiences of social work students with psychiatric difficulties and focused on their challenges as they went through the different stages of development as health care professionals. We interviewed 12 social work students with psychiatric difficulties and analyzed the data using the immersion/crystallization method. The findings reveal the developmental process they underwent from being patients to being "therapatients" (therapists who are also patients; here, therapists coping with psychiatric difficulties). This process included four stages: an initial exploration of the health care world; questioning the possibility of a patient being a therapist and feeling incompetent; identifying their ability to be professionals; and integrating between their patient and therapist parts to become a therapatient. Understanding this process and finding ways to help students through it is crucial to allowing the patient and therapist parts to "live" together and enrich each other, and to allowing integration of professional knowledge and personal experience.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)887-898
Number of pages12
JournalQualitative Health Research
Volume25
Issue number7
DOIs
StatePublished - 4 Jul 2015

Keywords

  • education, professional
  • lived experience
  • mental health and illness
  • qualitative analysis
  • social work

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