Objective: Understandings of recovery in low-and middle-income countries, such as South Africa, are still emerging. This study explored recovery understandings by service users, carers, and service providers in South Africa. Method: Thirty-seven in-depth, semistructured interviews and three focus groups with service users, carers, and service providers from three public tertiary psychiatric hospitals in the Western Cape province of South Africa were conducted in 2018 and 2019. Data were transcribed and analyzed, using atlas.ti and reflexive thematic analysis, to generate themes. Results: Seven themes, with further subthemes, were generated: (a) relationship with others, (b) moving positively forward, (c) relationship with self, (d) relating to the world, (e) (re-)gaining of strengths, (f) awareness of difficulties, and (g) clinical understanding to support personal recovery. From the themes, a definition of recovery for the South African context was developed. Conclusion and Implications for Practice: The identified themes were not mutually exclusive-overlap is inevitable when describing personal recovery. These results and definition are informing the second phase of the overall study-developing a measure of personal mental health recovery for the South African context. The results can contribute to the wider clinical, academic and governmental comprehension of recovery, assist in the obtaining or retaining of funding for local recovery initiatives, and hopefully be useful for service users to understand their own process of recovery better and to be able to move along in that process. We recommend replicating the study and investigating recovery-conducive environments in South Africa with service users.
Impact and ImplicationsSeven themes were generated and a definition of recovery formulated for the South African context. The results can contribute to the wider clinical, academic, and governmental comprehension of recovery; assist in the obtaining or retaining of funding for local recovery initiatives; and hopefully be useful for service users to understand their own process of recovery better and to be able to move along in that process.
HIV vaccine efficacy trials require the enrolment of large numbers of HIV-negative individuals and thus it is necessary to engage with communities where HIV incidence is high. We identify some of the caveats and pitfalls associated with researching community engagement in the context of HIV vaccine trials. These are as follows: the lack of consensus of what community engagement is and how it is practiced, the sometimes paradoxical role of community advisory boards as community representatives and challenges associated with information dissemination in communities. We identify a set of considerations for community engagement practitioners, trial investigators and social scientists when conducting community engagement.
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