Understanding the Mechanisms that Operate within CHIME: A Realist Review Protocol
Michael John Norton, John Paul Byrne, Tina Bedenik, Michael Ryan, Catherine Brogan, David Dwyer, Killian Walsh, Éidín Ní Shé, Chalotte Heinsvig Poulsen, Michael John Norton, Geoff Wong, Michael John Norton, Jutharat Thongsalab, Michael John Norton

TL;DR
This paper outlines a realist review protocol to explore how the CHIME framework supports mental health recovery by examining the underlying mechanisms involved.
Contribution
The study introduces a realist review to investigate the internal mechanisms of CHIME in mental health recovery, addressing a gap in existing literature.
Findings
The realist review will explore how and why CHIME mechanisms operate in individuals recovering from mental health challenges.
The review will follow a six-phase methodology to analyze and synthesize evidence on recovery mechanisms.
The findings will inform future research on mental health recovery frameworks in Ireland.
Abstract
Recovery originated from the civil rights movement of the 1960s/70s. However, no universally accepted definition of recovery had been constructed until 1993 when William A. Anthony suggested that recovery involved living one’s best life even with mental health difficulties. In 2011, Leamy et al. created CHIME [ Connectiveness, Hope, Identity, Meaning and purpose and Empowerment]. A concept that represents the key characteristics of recovery. It derived from a literature review into recovery from psychosis. Since 2011, the literature has examined these concepts individually and collectively to understand what they are in reality. However, few studies have investigated the internal mechanisms that causes a person to move from unwellness to recovery via CHIME. As such this proposed realist review will explore how and why the mechanisms within CHIME operate in individuals recovering from…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMental Health and Patient Involvement · Health Policy Implementation Science · Psychiatric care and mental health services
