1 Resources on Hearing Voices Prepared in 2015 by Gail Hornstein and Jacqui Dillon; Please send additions or corrections to [email protected] Books and Articles Andrew, E.M., Gray, N.S. & Snowden, R.J. (2008). The relationship between trauma and beliefs about hearing voices: A study of psychiatric and non-psychiatric voice hearers. Psychological Medicine, 38, 1409-1417. Arenella, J. (2012). Just accept it, the voices are real: Accepting the reality of voice hearers can open the door to change and recovery, says psychologist. Behavioral Healthcare (6), 20-23. Baker, P. (1995). Accepting the inner voices. Nursing Times (31), 59-61. Beavan, V. (2011). Towards a definition of “hearing voices”: A phenomenological approach. Psychosis: Psychological, Social and Integrative Approaches, 3, 63-73. Beavan, V. & Read, J. (2010). Hearing voices and listening to what they say: The importance of voice content in understanding and working with distressing voices. Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease, 198, 201-205. Beavan, V., Read, J. & Cartwright, C. (2011). The prevalence of voice-hearers in the general population: a literature review. Journal of Mental Health, 20(3), 281-292. Blackman, L. (2001). Hearing voices, embodiment and experience. London: Free Association Books. Chin, J.T., Hayward, M. & Drinnan, A. (2009). 'Relating' to voices: Exploring the relevance of this concept to people who hear voices. Psychology & Psychotherapy: Theory, Research & Practice, 82(1), 1-17. Cockshutt, G. (2004). Choices for voices: A voice hearer's perspective on hearing voices. Cognitive Neuropsychiatry, 9(1), 9-11. Coffey, M. & Hewitt, J. (2008). ‘You don’t talk about the voices’: Voice hearers and community mental health nurses talk about responding to voice hearing experiences. Journal of Clinical Nursing, 17, 1591-1600. Coleman, R. (1999). Hearing voices and the politics of oppression. In C. Newnes, G. Holmes & C. Dunn (eds.), This is Madness (pp.149-163). Ross-on-Wye, UK: PCCS Books. 2 Coleman, R. & Smith, M. (2006). Working with voices - From victim to victor (2nd ed). Lewis, Scotland: P&P Press (available from www.workingtorecovery.co.uk). Connor, C. & Birchwood, M. (2013). Power and perceived expressed emotion of voices: Their impact on depression and suicidal thinking in those who hear voices. Clinical Psychology Psychotherapy 20 (3) 100-205. Corstens, D., Escher, S. & Romme, M. (2008). Accepting and working with voices: The Maastricht Approach. In A. Moskowitz, I. Schafer & M.J. Dorahy (eds.), Psychosis, trauma and dissociation: Emerging perspectives on severe psychopathology (pp. 319-331). Oxford: Wiley-Blackwell. Corstens, D. & Longden, E. (2013). The origins of voices: links between life history and voice hearing in a survey of 100 cases. Psychosis, 5(3), 270-285. Corstens, D., Longden, E., McCarthy-Jones, S., Waddingham. R. & Thomas, N. (2014). Emerging perspectives from the hearing voices movement: Implications for research and practice. Schizophrenia Bulletin, 40 Suppl 4, S285-S294. Corstens, D., May, R. & Longden, E. (2007). Talking with voices: The voice dialoguing manual (available from www.intervoiceonline.org). Cottam, S., Paul, S.N., Doughty, O.J., Carpenter, L., Al-Mousawi, A., Karvounis, S. & Done, D.J. (2011). Does religious belief enable positive interpretation of auditory hallucinations? A comparison of religious voice hearers with and without psychosis. Cognitive Neuropsychiatry, 16(5), 403-421. Daalman, K., Boks, M.P.M., Diederen, K.M., de Weijer, A.D., Blom, J.D., Kahn, R.S. & Sommer, I.E.C. (2011). The same or different? A phenomenological comparison of auditory verbal hallucinations in healthy and psychotic individuals. Journal of Clinical Psychiatry, 72, (3), 320-325. Daalman, K. & Diederen, K.M. (2013). A final common pathway to hearing voices: Examining differences and similarities in clinical and non-clinical individuals. Psychosis, 5(3), 236-246. Deegan, P. Coping with voices: Self-help strategies for people who hear voices that are distressing (available from National Empowerment Center, www.power2u.org). Dillon, J. (2010). The tale of an ordinary little girl. Psychosis, 2(1), 79-83. Dillon, J. & Hornstein, G.A. (2013). Hearing voices peer support groups: A powerful alternative for people in distress. Psychosis, 5(3), 286-295. Dillon, J. & Longden, E. (2012). Hearing voices groups: Creating safe spaces to share taboo experiences. In M. Romme & S. Escher (eds.), Psychosis as a personal crisis: An experience-based approach (pp. 129-139). NY: Routledge. Escher, S. & Romme, M. (2010). Children hearing voices: What you need to know and what you can do. Ross-on-Wye, UK: PCCS Books. Escher, S. & Romme, M. (2012). The hearing voices movement. In J.D. Blom & I.E.C. Sommer (eds.), Hallucinations: Research and practice (pp. 385-393). NY: Springer Science + Business Media. Faccio, E., Romaioli, D., Dagani, J. & Cipolletta, S. (2013). Auditory hallucinations as a personal experience: Analysis of non-psychiatric voice hearers' narrations. Journal of Psychiatric and Mental Health Nursing, 20(9), 761-767. Goldsmith, L.P. (2012). A discursive approach to narrative accounts of hearing voices and recovery. Psychosis, 4(3), 235-245. Grantham, D. (2012). So, what's wrong with hearing voices? Proponents of European inspired hearing voices network plan peer-run groups across the U.S. Behavioral Healthcare, (2), 32-33. Gray, B. (2008). Hidden demons: A personal account of hearing voices and the alternative of the hearing voices movement. Schizophrenia Bulletin, 34(6), 1006-1007. Hayward, M. (2003). Interpersonal relating and voice hearing: To what extent does relating to the voice reflect social relating? Psychology and Psychotherapy, 76, 369-383. Hayward, M., Berry, K. & Ashton, A. (2011). Applying interpersonal theories to the understanding of and therapy for auditory hallucinations: A review of the literature and directions for further research. Clinical Psychology Review, 31, 1313-1323. Honig, A., Romme, M.A., Ensink, B.J., Escher, S.D., Pennings, M.H.A, & deVries, M.W. (1998). Auditory hallucinations: A comparison between patients and nonpatients. Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease, 186 (10), 646-651. Hornstein, G. (2009). Agnes’s jacket: A psychologist’s search for the meanings of madness. NY: Rodale Books. The hearing voices movement (HVN). (2013). The Psychologist, 26(8), 571. 3 Jackson, L.J., Hayward, M. & Cooke, A. (2010). Developing positive relationships with voices: A preliminary grounded theory. International Journal of Social Psychiatry, 57(5), 487-495. 4 Johns, L.C., Nazroo, J.Y., Bebbington, P. & Kuipers, E. (2002). Occurrence of hallucinatory experiences in a community sample and ethnic variations. British Journal of Psychiatry, 180, 174-78. Jones, M., & Coffey, M. (2012). Voice hearing: A secondary analysis of talk by people who hear voices. International Journal of Mental Health Nursing, 21(1), 50-59. Jones, N. & Shattell, M. (2013). Engaging with voices: Rethinking the clinical treatment of psychosis. Issues in Mental Health Nursing, 34(7), 562-563. Jones, S., Guy, A. & Ormrod, J.A. (2003). A Q-methodological study of hearing voices: A preliminary exploration of voice hearers' understanding of their experiences. Psychology & Psychotherapy, 76(2), 189. Kalhovde, A., Elstad, I., & Talseth, A.G. (2013). Understanding the experience of hearing voices and sounds others do not hear. Qualitative Health Research, 23(11), 470-480. Karlsson, L. (2008). ‘More real than reality’: A study of voice hearing. International Journal of Social Welfare, 17(4), 365-373. Lakeman, Richard. (2002). Making sense of the voices. International Journal of Nursing Studies, 38, 523-531. Lawrence, C., Jones, J. & Cooper, M. (2010). Hearing voices in a non-psychiatric population. Behavioral and Cognitive Psychotherapy, 38, 363-373. Longden, E. (2010). Making sense of voices: A personal story of recovery. Psychosis: Psychological, Social and Integrative Approaches, 2(3), 255-259. Longden, E. (2013). Learning from the voices in my head. New York: TED Books. Longden, E., Corstens, D. & Dillon, J. (2013). Recovery, discovery and revolution: The work of Intervoice and the hearing voices movement. In: S. Coles, S. Keenan & B. Diamond (eds.), Madness Contested: Power and Practice (pp. 161-180). Rosson-Wye, UK: PCCS Books. Longden, E., Corstens, D., Escher, S. & Romme, M. (2012). Voice hearing in a biographical context: A model for formulating the relationship between voices and life history. Psychosis: Psychological, Social and Integrative Approaches, 4(3), 224-234. 5 Longden E. & Dillon, J. (2014). The hearing voices movement. In J. Cromby, D. Harper & P. Reavey (eds.), Psychology, mental health and distress (pp. 151-156). Basingstoke, UK: Palgrave-Macmillan. Longden, E., Madill, A. & Waterman, M.G. (2012). Dissociation, trauma, and the role of lived experience: Toward a new conceptualization of voice hearing. Psychological Bulletin (1), 28–76. Luhrmann, T.M. (2013). Living with voices. Current (549), 3-7. Mawson, A., Berry, K., Murray, C. & Hayward, M. (2011). Voice hearing within the context of hearers' social worlds: An interpretative phenomenological analysis. Psychology & Psychotherapy, 84(3), 256-272. Mawson, A., Cohen, K., & Berry, K. (2010). Reviewing evidence for the cognitive model of auditory hallucinations: The relationship between cognitive voice appraisals and distress during psychosis. Clinical Psychology Review, 30, 248-258. Martin, P.J. (2000). Hearing voices and listening to those that hear them. Journal of Psychiatric and Mental Health Nursing, 7, 135-141. May, R. & Longden, E. (2010). Self-help approaches to hearing voices. In F. Larøi & A. Aleman (eds.), Hallucinations: A practical guide to treatment and management (pp. 257-278). NY: Oxford University Press. McCarthy-Jones, S. (2011). Voices from the storm: A critical review of quantitative studies of auditory verbal hallucinations and childhood sexual abuse. Clinical Psychology Review, 31, 983-992. McCarthy-Jones, S. (2012). Hearing voices: The histories, causes and meanings of auditory verbal hallucinations. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. McCarthy-Jones, S. & Longden, E. (2013). The voices others cannot hear. The Psychologist, 26(8), 570-574. McCarthy-Jones, S., Waegell, A. & Watkins, J. (2013). Spirituality and hearing voices: Considering the relation. Psychosis, 5(3), 247-258. Newton, E., Larkin, M., Melhuish, R. & Wykes, T. (2007). More than just a place to talk: Young people's experiences of group psychological therapy as an early intervention for auditory hallucinations. Psychology & Psychotherapy, 80(1), 127-149. 6 Percy, M.L., Bullimore, P. & Baker, J.A. (2013). Voice hearers’ perceptions of recovery: Findings from a focus group at the second world hearing voices festival and congress. Journal of Psychiatric and Mental Health Nursing, (6), 564-568. Read, J., Agar, K., Argyle, N. & Aderhold, V. (2003). Sexual and physical abuse during childhood and adulthood as predictors of hallucinations, delusions and thought disorder. Psychology and Psychotherapy, 76, 1-22. Romme, M. (2012). Accepting and making sense of voices: A recovery-focused therapy plan. In M. Romme & S. Escher (eds.), Psychosis as a personal crisis: An experience-based approach (pp. 153-165). NY: Routledge. Romme, M. (2012). Personal links between traumatic experiences and distorted emotions in those who hear voices. In M. Romme & S. Escher (eds.), Psychosis as a personal crisis: An experience-based approach (pp. 86-100). NY: Routledge. Romme, M. & Escher, S. (eds.). (1993, 2nd ed. 1998). Accepting voices. London: MIND Publications. Romme, M. & Escher, S. (1996). Empowering people who hear voices. In G. Haddock & P. Slade (eds.), Cognitive behavioural interventions with psychotic disorders (pp.137-150). London: Routledge. Romme, M. & Escher, S. (2000). Making sense of voices: A guide for mental health professionals working with voice-hearers (includes the Maastricht Interview). London: MIND Publications. Romme, M. & Escher, S. (2005). Trauma and hearing voices. In W. Larkin & A. Morrison (eds.) Trauma and psychosis: New directions for theory and therapy. Routledge: London. Romme, M. & Escher, S. (2010). Personal history and hearing voices. In F. Larøi & A. Aleman (eds.), Hallucinations: A practical guide to treatment and management (pp. 233-256). NY: Oxford University Press. Romme, M., Escher, S., Dillon, J., Corstens, D. & Morris, M. (2009). Living with voices: 50 stories of recovery. Ross-on-Wye, UK: PCCS Books. Romme, M., Honig, A., Noorthoorn E.O. & Escher, S. (1992). Coping with voices: An emancipatory approach. British Journal of Psychiatry, 161, 99-103. Romme, M. & Morris, M. (2013). The recovery process with hearing voices: Accepting as well as exploring their emotional background through a supported process. Psychosis, 5(3), 259-269. 7 Roxburgh, E.C. & Roe, C.A. (2014). Reframing voices and visions using a spiritual model: An interpretative phenomenological analysis of anomalous experiences in mediumship. Mental Health, Religion & Culture, 17(6), 641-653. Sanjuan, J., Gonzalez, J.C., Aguilar, E.J., Leal, C. & van Os, J. (2004). Pleasurable auditory hallucinations. Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica, 110, 273-278. Sapey, B. & Bullimore, P. (2013). Listening to voice hearers. Journal of Social Work, 13(6), 616-632. Sayer, J., Ritter, S. & Gournay, K. (2000). Beliefs about voices and their effects on coping strategies. Journal of Advanced Nursing, 31, 1199-1205. Schnackenberg, J.K. & Martin, C.R. (2013). The need for experience focused counselling (EFC) with voice hearers in training and practice: A review of the literature. Journal of Psychiatric and Mental Health Nursing, (5), 391-402. Sidgwick, H.A. et.al.(1894). Report of the census of hallucinations. Proceedings of the Society for Psychical Research, 10, 25-422. Smith, D.B. (2007). Can you live with the voices in your head? New York Times Magazine, 156, 48-53. Smith, D. (2007). Muses, madmen, and prophets: Rethinking the history, science, and meaning of auditory hallucination. New York: Penguin Press. Sommer, I.E., Daalman, K., Rietkerk, T., Diederen, K.M., Bakker, S. & Wijkstra, J. (2010). Healthy individuals with auditory verbal hallucinations; who are they? Psychiatric assessments of a selected sample of 103 subjects. Schizophrenia Bulletin, 36, 633–641. Suri, R. (2011). Making sense of voices: An exploration of meaningfulness in auditory hallucinations in schizophrenia. Journal of Humanistic Psychology 51(2), 152-71. Taylor, G. & Murray, C. (2012). A qualitative investigation into non-clinical voice hearing: What factors may protect against distress? Mental Health, Religion & Culture, 15(4), 373-388. Thomas, N., McLeod, H.J. & Brewin, CR. ( 2009). Interpersonal complementarity in responses to auditory hallucinations in psychosis. British Journal of Clinical Psychology, 48, 411-424. Thomas, P., Bracken, P. & Leudar, I. (2004). Hearing voices: A phenomenologicalhermeneutic approach. Cognitive Neuropsychiatry, 9(1), 13-23. Tien, A.Y. (1991). Distributions of hallucination in the population. Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology, 26, 287-292. Vaughan, S. & Fowler, D. (2004). The distress experienced by voice hearers is associated with the perceived relationship between the voice hearer and the voice. British Journal of Clinical Psychology, 43, 143–153. Watkins, J. (2008). Hearing voices: A common human experience. Michelle Anderson Publishing. Whitfield, C.L., Dube, S.R., Felitti, V.J. & Anda, R.F. (2005). Adverse childhood experiences and hallucinations. Child Abuse and Neglect, 29, 797-810. Woods, A. (2013). The voice-hearer. Journal of Mental Health, 22(3), 263-270. Woods, A., Romme, M., McCarthy-Jones, S., Escher, S. & Dillon, J. (2013). Special edition: Voices in a positive light. Psychosis, 5(3), 213-215. Websites Behind the Label – http://www.behindthelabel.co.uk Experience Project: “I Hear Voices” – http://www.experienceproject.com/groups/Hear-Voices/4100 Hearing Voices Network – http://www.hearing-voices.org Hearing Voices Network Australia – http://hvna.net.au/ Hearing Voices Ireland – http://hearingvoicesnetworkireland.ie Hearing Voices Network USA – http://www.hearingvoicesusa.org/ Intervoice – http://www.intervoiceonline.org Mental Health Foundation – Hearing Voices http://www.mentalhealth.org.uk/help-information/mental-health-a-z/H/hearing-voices National Paranoia Network – http://www.nationalparanoianetwork.org Voice Collective – http://www.voicecollective.co.uk 8 Films 9 2009 and 2010 World Hearing Voices Conference DVD (2011) Available at http://www.intervoiceonline.org/3085/news/congress-dvd.html Beyond the Medical Model (2013). Available at: http://www.westernmassrlc.org/film-series-alternative-perspectives Mars Project (2008). Available at: http://www.madinamerica.com/product/mars-project2008/ Take These Broken Wings (2008). Available at: http://wildtruth.net/dvd/brokenwings There is a Fault in Reality (2010) Available at: http://www.madinamerica.com/product/fault-reality-2010
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