An Ethnographic Study of Mental Health Treatment and Outcomes
Doing What Works
- By Mary V. Donohue, Fran Babiss

Price: $30.00add to cart
- Price: $30.00
- Binding: Paperback (also available in Hardback)
- Pages: 172
- Published by: Routledge
- Publication Date: 5th January 2004
- ISBN: 978-0-7890-2186-1
About the Book
Learn why treatment outcomes don't always match the patient's point-of-view!An Ethnographic Study of Mental Health Treatment and Outcomes: Doing What Works documents the treatment history of three women suffering from affective and personality disorders. The book guides you through the process of conducting qualitative/ethnographic research, providing examples of data collection techniques, analysis, and interpretation. Interviews and observations provide you with a glimpse into the world of mental health treatment from each woman's perspective and offer suggestions on interventions and group activities designed to improve treatment outcomes.
An Ethnographic Study of Mental Health Treatment and Outcomes: Doing What Works is a first-hand look at the reality of mental health treatment, where outcomes are not necessarily related to a patient's satisfaction with his or her treatment and, in fact, often have little relationship to the kind of treatment the patient has received. The book also includes research evidence on comparisons of the efficacy of individual versus group treatment, the success rate of Alcoholics Anonymous and Overeaters Anonymous, the effectiveness of Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT) for patients diagnosed with borderline personality disorder, and current treatment for anorexia nervosa.
An Ethnographic Study of Mental Health Treatment and Outcomes: Doing What Works will help you improve your clinical skills by exploring the treatment experiences of three women:
- Debora40, college-educated, married with children; suffering from personality disorders, eating disorders, anxiety disorders; a survivor of childhood abuse; a survivor of several suicide attempts; chronically self-destructive
- Belinda22, overweight, always dressed in black, self-mutilator covered in body piercings and tattoos; professional hairdresser and practicing witch; has attempted suicide; former Alcoholic Anonymous member; cocaine addict
- Cicelylate 30s, school teacher, divorced but still lives with ex-husband and two children; suffers from anorexia; child of an alcoholic; guarded, controlled, suicidal
Table of Contents
- Chapter 1. Introduction: What Are Outcomes?
- Chapter 2. Doing Research in the Field: Ethnographic Methods
- Chapter 3. The Stories of Three Women Treated for Mental Illness
- Chapter 4. Treatment Experiences: Helpful and Not Helpful
- Chapter 5. Treatment Experiences Special Themes: Restrictions and Self-Destruction
- Chapter 6. Outcomes: Treatment Experiences Applied to Daily Living
- Chapter 7. Conclusion: Using the Information to Inform Practice and Improve Outcomes
- References
- APPENDICES
- WAYS OF ANALYZING QUALITATIVE DATA: EXAMPLES FROM THE RAW DATA
- Introduction
- Appendix A: Participant Checking
- Appendix B: Marking the Text for Initial Category Creation
- Appendix C: Doing an Analysis of the Feelings Connected to Doing Ethnographic Work
- Appendix D: Analytic Memos in the Beginning Stages of Working with the Data of the Women
- Index
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