Archives of Psychiatric Nursing
Volume 17, Issue 1 , Pages 27-32, February 2003

Gender-related concerns of rural women with severe and persistent mental illnesses☆☆

University of Virginia, School of Nursing, Charlottesville, VA.

Abstract 

This study used focus groups to investigate the perceptions of rural women with severe and persistent mental illness (SPMI) about their gender-related health concerns. In a series of five focus groups conducted with 16 women at rural psychosocial clubhouses, women with SPMI discussed many gender-related issues, including unresolved grief over loss of children, isolation from family members, lack of sexual partners, diminished sexuality, and bodily changes secondary to medication side-effects. Women with mental illness felt like their roles as women was superseded by their role as mentally ill individuals. Rural women with SPMI have unmet needs for women's health. Psychiatric nurses have the optimal background for addressing gender-related concerns of rural women with SPMI. Copyright 2003, Elsevier Science (USA). All rights reserved.

 

 Supported by a University of Virginia School of Nursing Intramural Grant.

☆☆ Address reprint requests to Debra Lyon, RN, PhD, Assistant Professor, University of Virginia, School of Nursing, PO Box 800782, Charlottesville, VA 22908. E-mail: del2a@virginia.edu

 0883-9417/03/1701-0005$30.00/0

PII: S0883-9417(02)35903-X

doi:10.1053/apnu.2003.3

Archives of Psychiatric Nursing
Volume 17, Issue 1 , Pages 27-32, February 2003