Additional Information
Book Details
Abstract
The concept of personal recovery as opposed to clinical recovery is one only comparatively recently addressed in mental health circles. This groundbreaking handbook examines it through the narratives of, and interviews with, people from all walks of life who ahve embarkes on that uncertain journey and thus might be considered heroes.
Table of Contents
Section Title | Page | Action | Price |
---|---|---|---|
Cover | Cover | ||
Contents | 1 | ||
Foreword | 2 | ||
Introduction | 9 | ||
Part 1: Historical Recovery Heroes | 19 | ||
Chapter 1: Winston Churchill | 21 | ||
Chapter 2: Florence Nightingale | 29 | ||
Chapter 3: Charles Darwin | 37 | ||
Chapter 4: Abraham Lincoln | 45 | ||
Chapter 5: Isaac Newton | 55 | ||
Part 2: Contemporary Recovery Heroes | 65 | ||
Chapter 6: Peter Chadwick | 67 | ||
Chapter 7: Dolly Sen | 75 | ||
Chapter 8: Emma Harding | 83 | ||
Chapter 9: Margaret Muir | 91 | ||
Chapter 10: Michelle McNary | 99 | ||
Chapter 11: Stuart Baker-Brown | 107 | ||
Chapter 12: Rachel Perkins | 117 | ||
Chapter 13: Andrew Voyce | 127 | ||
Chapter 14: Matthew Ward | 135 | ||
Chapter 15: Gordon McManus | 143 | ||
Chapter 16: Rufus May | 151 | ||
Chapter 17: Peter Bullimore | 161 | ||
Chapter 18: Bose Dania | 169 | ||
Chapter 19: Augusto D Mello | 177 | ||
Chapter 20: Glenn Roberts | 185 | ||
Chapter 21: Conclusion | 193 |