January 2012, Vol 43, No. 1
Print version: page 55
1 min read
Cite This Article
American Psychological Association. (2012, January 1). Recovery principles. Monitor on Psychology, 43(1). https://www.apa.org/monitor/2012/01/recovery-principles
At a 2004 National Consensus Conference on Mental Health Recovery and Mental Health Systems Transformation convened by SAMHSA, patients, health-care professionals, researchers and others agreed on 10 core principles undergirding a recovery orientation:
Self-direction: Consumers determine their own path to recovery.
Individualized and person-centered: There are multiple pathways to recovery based on individuals’ unique strengths, needs, preferences, experiences and cultural backgrounds.
Empowerment: Consumers can choose among options and participate in all decisions that affect them.
Holistic: Recovery focuses on people’s entire lives, including mind, body, spirit and community.
Nonlinear: Recovery isn’t a step-by-step process but one based on continual growth, occasional setbacks and learning from experience.
Strengths-based: Recovery builds on people’s strengths.
Peer support: Mutual support plays an invaluable role in recovery.
Respect: Acceptance and appreciation by society, communities, systems of care and consumers themselves are crucial to recovery.
Responsibility: Consumers are responsible for their own self-care and journeys of recovery.
Hope: Recovery’s central, motivating message is a better future — that people can and do overcome obstacles.
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American Psychological Association. (2012, January 1). Recovery principles. Monitor on Psychology, 43(1). https://www.apa.org/monitor/2012/01/recovery-principles
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