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Published Online: 5 August 2005

Everyone's Invited to Celebration Recovery

As psychiatrists, we attend to the diagnosis and treatment of psychiatric illnesses and the numerous barriers to care that patients encounter that prevent them from getting well. Increasingly, we are now focusing attention on what is the most important phase of illness to our patients: recovery. APA's Institute on Psychiatric Services will do just that this fall by holding a festive gala known as Celebration Recovery in which people who have struggled with mental illness, along with their friends and relatives, will come together with psychiatrists and others attending the institute, as well as representatives of numerous San Diego provider and advocacy groups.
This extraordinary and unprecedented event at the institute will be held on Saturday, October 8, in the Grande Ballroom of the Sheraton San Diego Hotel and Marina. The free, four-hour celebration will feature music, games, inspirational talks, dancing, food, and information booths.
Celebration Recovery is being presented by the Irwin Foundation in collaboration with APA. The Irwin Foundation, which receives sponsorship from a wide array of private, public, and voluntary entities, develops programs to further the vision of recovery from psychiatric illness and develops recovery-focused workshops and symposia.
Celebration Recovery highlights an emerging concept in psychiatry that emphasizes person-centeredness, respect, responsibility, hope, choice, quality of life, consumer and family agency and empowerment, self-help, partnership, diversity, and community inclusiveness.
A Celebration Recovery event was held at the NAMI convention in June in Austin, Texas. Courtesy of the Irwin Foundation
Recovery from mental disorders should be an expectation, yet the reality of recovery is too often contradicted by stigma, disempowerment, diminished expectations, custodial care instead of active treatment, and pervasive pessimism.
The recovery vision is increasingly informing mainstream psychiatric initiatives. The 2003 report of the President's New Freedom Commission on Mental Health called for a recovery-focused, consumer- and family-driven transformation of mental health care in America, such that “adults with serious mental illness and children with severe emotional disturbance [can] live, work, learn, and participate fully in their communities.”
The vision of recovery has been adopted by most public mental health authorities. In December 2004, more than 100 leaders, including mental health and addiction recovery experts, consumers and families, advocates, community and state officials, national association staff, and public officials, joined forces at the consensus conference “Mental Health Recovery and Systems Transformation,” sponsored by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration. Its goal was to define recovery, reach a consensus on its key principles and elements, and identify recovery implementation strategies that work.
In line with these developments and reflecting its leadership role, APA has chosen “Recovery and the Community” as the theme for the 2005 institute. The institute will offer three plenary sessions and numerous workshops and symposia on the theme.
The Irwin Foundation was created in honor of Irwin B., who had a severe mental illness. While he eventually benefited from treatment advances, enabling him to end a relentless cycle of hospitalizations, he continued to struggle with stigma and nonacceptance. The foundation is designed to commemorate his courage and determination to eliminate stigma and to create a better future for those recovering from mental illness.
Since 2001, the Irwin Foundation has held Celebration Recovery events across the country, including most recently at the 2005 convention of the National Alliance for the Mentally Ill in Austin (see page 4).
More information on Celebration Recovery is posted at<www.psych.org/edu/ann_mtgs/ips/05/recoverydiscovery/recovery.pdf>.

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Go to Psychiatric News
Psychiatric News
Pages: 30 - 36

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Published online: 5 August 2005
Published in print: August 5, 2005

Notes

Patients and their family and friends will celebrate recovery at a light-hearted afternoon event offering food, fellowship, music, and games.

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Michael Schwartz
M.D.
Michael Schwartz, M.D., is an APA member and medical director of the Irwin Foundation.

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