Self-Care: Peer Perspective on Living with Psychosis Part 2
Categories:
Department of Psychiatry,
Best Practices in Schizophrenia Treatment (BeST) Center,
Department of Psychiatry,
Department of Psychiatry,
Best Practices in Schizophrenia Treatment (BeST) Center,
FEP Project ECHO,
Department of Psychiatry,
Best Practices in Schizophrenia Treatment (BeST) Center,
FEP Project ECHO,
Peer Support,
Department of Psychiatry,
Project ECHO | Tags:
anhedonia,
antipsychotic medications,
awareness,
barriers,
breakdown,
CBTp,
cognitive behavioral therapy for psychosis,
coordinated specialty care,
cost of treatment,
CSC,
DBT,
delusions,
depression,
dialectical behavior therapy,
disability,
effective strategies,
fatigue,
FEP,
first episode psychosis,
food insecurity,
gainful employment,
grandiosity,
hallucinations,
hospitalization,
housing issues,
life stressors,
lived experiences,
medication,
meditation,
mental health counseling,
mindful awareness,
mindfulness,
negative symptoms,
neurocognitive impairment,
nutrition,
paranoia,
paranoid delusions,
paranoid thoughts,
personal self-care,
positive symptoms,
pressures,
preventative measure,
Professional Development,
psychiatric help,
psychiatric medications,
psychiatric medicines,
psychosis,
psychotic condition,
psychotic disorders,
psychotic symptoms,
recovery,
remission,
schizophrenia,
self-care,
self-stigmatize,
sense of self,
social security,
social withdrawal,
stigma,
substance use,
substances,
supervision,
support groups,
symptoms,
therapy,
voices,
work environments
A personal account of living with psychosis is shared, along with discussion on how to engage in self-care.