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never recover. I was told that I could expect my condition to deteriorate with time, and I would probably spend the rest of my life under the care of the state psychiatric hospital system.

      I later learned—thanks to the thinking of Emil Kraepelin, the German psychiatrist who more than 100 years ago first described the condition that came to be known as schizophrenia—that psychiatric professionals generally believed for most of the twentieth century that people diagnosed with schizophrenia would never recover.

      Fortunately, our understanding of serious psychiatric conditions has improved greatly during the past few decades. We now have solid evidence that many, perhaps even most, people diagnosed with serious mental illness can, in fact, recover, at least to some degree. This understanding became particularly widespread with the landmark publication of Mental Health: A Report of the Surgeon General in 1999 and the President’s New Freedom Commission on Mental Health’s Achieving the Promise: Transforming Mental Health Care in America in 2003. The latter document’s primary recommendation was to revolutionize the mental health system of the United States, with recovery as the primary goal of the new system. Subsequently, the federal government’s Substance Abuse and Mental Health Administration (SAMHSA) took the lead in encouraging mental health professionals throughout the country to engage in practices oriented toward “recovery.”

      The term “recovery” can, of course, have different meanings to different people. Although some mental health professionals and advocates now believe that virtually anyone diagnosed with schizophrenia can totally recover, most tend to take a more measured approach to recovery. Most believe the majority of people with serious mental illness can make significant improvements with treatment but will continue to experience at least residual symptoms and remain vulnerable to episodic periods of psychosis.

      This fairly recent optimism concerning the likelihood of recovery for people with serious mental illness has given rise to a variety of “recovery-oriented” approaches to caring for those of us in this population. Overall, the recovery approach emphasizes independence, autonomy, and responsibility on the part of the person with serious mental illness.

      Despite these messages from national leaders, it has been difficult to overcome mental health professionals’ pessimism concerning recovery for seriously mentally ill people and the tendency to marginalize them. Indeed, relatively few professionals, including psychologists, have taken a serious interest in developing and/or providing recovery-oriented services for us.

      Perhaps it is not surprising that some of the first mental health professionals to forge specific recovery-oriented approaches to care received treatment for serious mental illness at one time and are now themselves “in recovery.” Patricia Deegan, PhD, a psychologist who is in recovery from schizophrenia, has developed several recovery-oriented approaches. Her work on developing “shared decision making” has been particularly impressive. Beth Baxter, MD, who is also in recovery from schizophrenia, worked with Sita Diehl to develop the BRIDGES program, in which recovering people provide guidance to other people in recovery. Dan Fisher, MD, PhD, yet another psychiatrist who has been diagnosed with and hospitalized for schizophrenia, has developed a recovery approach that he calls Emotional CPR (eCPR). Information about Dr. Fisher’s initiatives is available from the National Empowerment Center at http://www.power2u.org.

      Of course, other mental health professionals have developed approaches to recovery-oriented care without ever experiencing serious mental illness firsthand. Examples include cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), which uses systematic goal-oriented procedures to address dysfunctional cognitive patterns, maladaptive emotions, and self-defeating behaviors, and cognitive enhancement training (CET), which is designed to improve neurocognition, social cognition, and social adjustment for adults with schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder.

      Along these lines, it is so good to see that clinical psychologist Victor Ashear, PhD, has developed another tool for people in recovery. After working for many years with seriously mentally ill veterans under the care of the Veterans Health Administration, Dr. Ashear has drawn on his substantial experience to develop a workbook specifically to give guidance to people with serious mental illness.

      With Self-Acceptance: The Key to Recovery from Mental Illness, Dr. Ashear has developed a step-by-step approach that focuses on improving self-acceptance to achieve optimal recovery. He delineates five skills areas on which recovering people can concentrate, providing them with a practical template which, when followed, holds the promise of adding yet another dimension to the concept of recovery-oriented care. I can see why initial feedback concerning the effectiveness of this program, which until now has primarily been employed with veterans, has been so positive.

      Those of us in recovery from various forms of psychosis and other serious mental disorders greatly appreciate the skills and efforts of Dr. Ashear and other mental health professionals who are or may become similarly dedicated.

      Frederick J. Frese, PhD

      Associate Professor of Psychiatry

      Northeast Ohio Medical University

       Acknowledgments

      From Victor

      First, I would like to thank the late Merton Cochran, PhD, my boss at the Sheridan VA Medical Center, and the staff at the Serious Mental Illness Treatment Resource and Evaluation Center (SMITREC) at the Ann Arbor VA Center for Clinical Management Research. Dr. Cochran encouraged me to submit a proposal to SMITREC for a specialty program of intensive treatment and rehabilitation for veterans with serious mental illness, and when SMITREC accepted my proposal, he and the center’s staff provided me with the resources to develop and assess the program that led to this workbook.

      I want to thank my good friend and colleague Joe Graca, PhD, who worked at the Knoxville (Iowa) VA Medical Center at that time. Dr. Graca helped me refine the workbook version my staff and I initially used so we could share it with other providers. He offered considerable encouragement and support over the years and became a strong advocate for this approach.

      Many staff members at the Sheridan VA Medical Center worked with me or used this workbook with their groups and provided me with feedback. I would like to mention three with whom I particularly enjoyed working: Barbara Zeigler, PhD; Karen Walmsley, LCSW; and Denise Hagney, CNA.

      When I served as Recovery Coordinator for the Sheridan VA Medical Center, I worked and became familiar with Megan Harvey, PhD, Recovery Coordinator at the Denver VA Medical Center. Dr. Harvey also supported the use of this workbook and helped make it available to veterans in that facility.

      Susan Blaney, MSN, FPMHNP-BC, of the Cheyenne VA Medical Center, took a special interest in the workbook and successfully used it with veterans in her care.

      I have had the good fortune to work under several other supervisors who supported my use of this workbook. David Schultz, MD, nominated me for a special award based on the program on which this workbook is based. Michal Wilson, MD, and Michael Hiller, MD, were also supportive of my program and made it possible for me to continue to offer a longer-term approach when resources were slim and other programs were discontinued.

      I am grateful to Dr. Robert Hutzell for granting me permission to use his Life Purpose Scale in this workbook free of charge.

      Well-known psychologist and recovery movement advocate Fred Frese, PhD, showed an interest in this workbook after I gave a presentation on it at the National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI) Wyoming Conference in May of 2014. Dr. Frese graciously provided the excellent Foreword to this workbook.

      I want to thank Vanessa Hastings, my editor and collaborator on this version of the workbook. Working with her has been a pleasure, and she finds clearer ways to say things than I do. She also has demonstrated courage in sharing the details of her experience with mental illness in this workbook, which I believe greatly enhances its value to users. I would like to thank Nancy Schenck, Executive Editor of CRP, for her gentle and able assistance in polishing this workbook

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