| Literature DB >> 17030491 |
Judith Lathlean1, Abigail Burgess, Tina Coldham, Colin Gibson, Lesley Herbert, Tracy Levett-Jones, Lucy Simons, Stephen Tee.
Abstract
The agenda of involving service users and their carers more meaningfully in the development, delivery and evaluation of professional education in health is gaining in importance. The paper reports on a symposium which presented three diverse initiatives, established within a school of nursing and midwifery in the United Kingdom. These represent different approaches and attempts to engage service users and in some instances carers more fully in professional education aimed at developing mental health practitioners. Each is presented as achieving movement on a continuum of participation from service users as passive recipients to service users as collaborators and co-researchers. The paper concludes with a discussion of the lessons to be learnt which will hopefully stimulate service user involvement on a wider basis.Mesh:
Year: 2006 PMID: 17030491 DOI: 10.1016/j.nedt.2006.07.017
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nurse Educ Today ISSN: 0260-6917 Impact factor: 3.442