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DOI: 10.1037/h0095032
OpenAccess: Closed
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Peer support: A theoretical perspective.

Shery Mead,David Hilton,Laurie Curtis

Ostracism
Respite care
Outreach
2001
This article offers one theoretical perspective of peer support and attempts to define the elements that, when reinforced through education and training, provide a new cultural context for healing and recovery. Persons labeled with psychiatric disability have become victims of social and cultural ostracism and consequently have developed a sense of self that reinforces the "patient" identity. Enabling members of peer support to understand the nature and impact of these cultural forces leads individuals and peer communities toward a capacity for personal, relational, and social change. It is our hope that consumers from all different types of programs (e.g. drop-in, social clubs, advocacy, support, outreach, respite), traditional providers, and policy makers will find this article helpful in stimulating dialogue about the role of peer programs in the development of a recovery based system.
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    Peer support: A theoretical perspective.” is a paper by Shery Mead David Hilton Laurie Curtis published in 2001. It has an Open Access status of “closed”. You can read and download a PDF Full Text of this paper here.