Original Article

Family perspectives on severe mental disorders and relapse prevention: a qualitative study

Sawab Sawab, Ah Yusuf, Rizki Fitryasari, R. R.S.E. Pujiastuti, Permana Putra
Journal of Public Health in Africa | Vol 14, S 2 : 6th International Symposium of Public Health ISoPH| a314 | DOI: https://doi.org/10.4081/jphia.2023.2572 | © 2024 Sawab Sawab, Ah Yusuf, Rizki Fitryasari, R. R.S.E. Pujiastuti, Permana Putra | This work is licensed under CC Attribution 4.0
Submitted: 09 April 2024 | Published: 25 May 2023

About the author(s)

Sawab Sawab, Doctoral Program in Nursing, Faculty of Nursing Universitas Airlangga, Surabaya, Indonesia; and, Polytechnic of the Ministry of Health Semarang, Indonesia
Ah Yusuf, Faculty of Nursing, Universitas Airlangga, Surabaya, Indonesia
Rizki Fitryasari, Faculty of Nursing, Universitas Airlangga, Surabaya, Indonesia
R. R.S.E. Pujiastuti, Polytechnic of the Ministry of Health Semarang, Indonesia
Permana Putra, Polytechnic of the Ministry of Health Semarang, Indonesia

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Abstract

Background: The relapse of severe mental disorders is still quite high due to the lack of family knowledge in treating schizophrenic patients. The family treats and prevents the relapse of severe mental disorder by taking the sufferer to spiritual treatment, a shaman, being shackled (pasung) because of the assumption that the cause is evil from ghosts, magic, curses, and unbelief.

Objective: The purpose of this study is to explore the experience of families preventing the relapse of severe mental disorders.

Materials and Methods: This study is qualitative research with a phenomenological approach. The sampling was conducted by purposive sampling with 9 participants. Data were collected using semi-structured in-depth interviews with audio-recorded, transcribed verbatim, validated, and analyzed based on Colaizzi’s method of data analysis.

Results: Four themes were generated, including: i) the perception of severe mental illness; ii) the causes of relapse; iii) family prevention for severe mental disorders relapse; iv) relapse becomes helplessness and a burden on the family.

Conclusions: Lack of family knowledge of severe mental disorders, prevention of relapse, and lack of social support causes helplessness and a burden on the family. Increased knowledge, coping skills, and support for families with Schizophrenia are very important to help relapse prevention and the burden that arises.


Keywords

family; severe mental illness; relapse prevention

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