Spiritual recovery of people with bipolar disorder in Malaysia

People with any mental disorder can get benefit from the spiritual aspects of life for recovery, particularly in searching for the meaning of life and engaging in meaningful activities. However, little is known about such effects in the population of bipolar disorder. The concepts of spirituality...

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Main Authors: Mohamad Shariff, Nurasikin, Crawford, Paul, Wright, Nicola
Format: Conference or Workshop Item
Language:English
Published: 2017
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Online Access:http://irep.iium.edu.my/58242/7/58242.pdf
http://irep.iium.edu.my/58242/
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spelling my.iium.irep.582422017-09-07T02:31:55Z http://irep.iium.edu.my/58242/ Spiritual recovery of people with bipolar disorder in Malaysia Mohamad Shariff, Nurasikin Crawford, Paul Wright, Nicola H Social Sciences (General) People with any mental disorder can get benefit from the spiritual aspects of life for recovery, particularly in searching for the meaning of life and engaging in meaningful activities. However, little is known about such effects in the population of bipolar disorder. The concepts of spirituality are highly contestable, as they are too broad and removed from the original religious understanding. The concepts are more notable as encompassing multi-dimensional aspects of people’s lives such as social, emotional, and psychological. Viewing that Western or secular worldview dominates most of the literature in spirituality, it is time to explore the concept of spirituality from the Eastern and religious worldview, such as the Malaysian view. Thus, the aim of this study is to provide a conceptual understanding of people with bipolar disorder with a religious affiliation in Malaysia. This study employs a Grounded Theory and explores the narratives from the interviews of 25 participants. The narratives strongly suggest the salient resources or can be referred to as various forms of capital, as in the capital theory, namely, religious, social, psychological, and medicinal. More important is how these capitals are the enablers for recovery in mental health and well-being, where the participants in the sample engage in a more meaningful life and positive adaptations. This study also extends the Bourdieusian spiritual capital, in which the salient resources are termed as the capital bundle. More significant is how the capital bundles are working contiguously in building and accumulating the spiritual capital. This process is conducive to recovery within the social life of people with bipolar disorder or perhaps other mental disorders 2017 Conference or Workshop Item REM application/pdf en http://irep.iium.edu.my/58242/7/58242.pdf Mohamad Shariff, Nurasikin and Crawford, Paul and Wright, Nicola (2017) Spiritual recovery of people with bipolar disorder in Malaysia. In: 19th International Conference on Mental Health, 21st-22nd May 2017, Berlin, German. (Unpublished)
institution Universiti Islam Antarabangsa Malaysia
building IIUM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider International Islamic University Malaysia
content_source IIUM Repository (IREP)
url_provider http://irep.iium.edu.my/
language English
topic H Social Sciences (General)
spellingShingle H Social Sciences (General)
Mohamad Shariff, Nurasikin
Crawford, Paul
Wright, Nicola
Spiritual recovery of people with bipolar disorder in Malaysia
description People with any mental disorder can get benefit from the spiritual aspects of life for recovery, particularly in searching for the meaning of life and engaging in meaningful activities. However, little is known about such effects in the population of bipolar disorder. The concepts of spirituality are highly contestable, as they are too broad and removed from the original religious understanding. The concepts are more notable as encompassing multi-dimensional aspects of people’s lives such as social, emotional, and psychological. Viewing that Western or secular worldview dominates most of the literature in spirituality, it is time to explore the concept of spirituality from the Eastern and religious worldview, such as the Malaysian view. Thus, the aim of this study is to provide a conceptual understanding of people with bipolar disorder with a religious affiliation in Malaysia. This study employs a Grounded Theory and explores the narratives from the interviews of 25 participants. The narratives strongly suggest the salient resources or can be referred to as various forms of capital, as in the capital theory, namely, religious, social, psychological, and medicinal. More important is how these capitals are the enablers for recovery in mental health and well-being, where the participants in the sample engage in a more meaningful life and positive adaptations. This study also extends the Bourdieusian spiritual capital, in which the salient resources are termed as the capital bundle. More significant is how the capital bundles are working contiguously in building and accumulating the spiritual capital. This process is conducive to recovery within the social life of people with bipolar disorder or perhaps other mental disorders
format Conference or Workshop Item
author Mohamad Shariff, Nurasikin
Crawford, Paul
Wright, Nicola
author_facet Mohamad Shariff, Nurasikin
Crawford, Paul
Wright, Nicola
author_sort Mohamad Shariff, Nurasikin
title Spiritual recovery of people with bipolar disorder in Malaysia
title_short Spiritual recovery of people with bipolar disorder in Malaysia
title_full Spiritual recovery of people with bipolar disorder in Malaysia
title_fullStr Spiritual recovery of people with bipolar disorder in Malaysia
title_full_unstemmed Spiritual recovery of people with bipolar disorder in Malaysia
title_sort spiritual recovery of people with bipolar disorder in malaysia
publishDate 2017
url http://irep.iium.edu.my/58242/7/58242.pdf
http://irep.iium.edu.my/58242/
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