| Literature DB >> 29062529 |
Marjorie Ghisoni1, Christine Ann Wilson2, Karen Morgan3, Bethan Edwards4, Natalie Simon5, Emma Langley5, Helen Rees6, Amanda Wells7, Philip John Tyson8, Phil Thomas2, Allen Meudell4, Frank Kitt2, Brian Mitchell9, Alan Bowen9, Jason Celia2.
Abstract
PLAIN ENGLISHEntities:
Keywords: Delivery of health services; Mental health; Patient and public involvement; Priority setting; Public health; Research; User involvement; User priorities
Year: 2017 PMID: 29062529 PMCID: PMC5611630 DOI: 10.1186/s40900-016-0054-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Res Involv Engagem ISSN: 2056-7529
Workstation 1 – Treatment and recovery
| How has the (Mental Health) Measure affected treatment in primary care? | |
| How do we measure the effects of the (Mental Health) Measure? | |
| What treatments are available to aid recovery? How can we help service users and carers to know about a full list of treatments and their effectiveness for different conditions? | |
| How do available treatments differ in different areas? Is there a league table and how can service users and carers access this? | |
| How does the Exercise Referral Programme affect/differ people with different Mental Health diagnoses? | |
| How does exercise make people with mental health problems feel better? And, How does it work for different diagnoses? | |
| Are some sports more effective (as treatment for depression) than others? And if there is why aren’t service users aware of this? | |
| How is information regarding informed choice disseminated to people with mental health problems? | |
| Is the choice of treatments available for service users actually an informed choice? | |
| How do service users select their treatment? Is there really any choice? | |
| How is the long term effectiveness of treatment measured? | |
| How do treatments change over time? | |
| Research that looks at the Geographical comparison of services provided through primary care under the Mental Health Measure. | |
| Is there any research that looks for a correlation between the ability to access services and their effect on recovery? | |
| How are carers supported during the recovery of the person for whom they care? Are they supported to embrace their changing role at this time? | |
| Are services fragmented with several different specialist services or are there different specialists in one team? Are crisis teams really integrated within Community Mental Health Teams? | |
| What are the effects on service users of having to deal with lots of different people, maybe in several different teams? | |
| What is the cost effectiveness of many different services being involved with one service user? | |
| Would it be possible to achieve coordination of services? | |
| What support is available in long term recovery? | |
| Are systems geared towards crisis rather than prevention? | |
| Are there specialist services for mental health problems seen as ‘less serious? | |
| Does diagnosis include an examination of physical problems which might cause mental ill health? | |
| Can ‘therapy’ be a cause of mental health problems? | |
| How can people with mental health problems develop their own support networks? | |
| Can Health and Safety regulations affect recovery? If so how? | |
| How do service users use self-management to realise their expectations and become empowered? | |
| How do the following affect service user experience: | |
| Whole person being treated | |
| Alternative treatments | |
| Working in partnership | |
| The effects of diagnosis on recovery | |
| How do service users inform professionals that recovery is possible? | |
| How do professionals ‘recover’ with service users? | |
| Once diagnosed, do service users feel that they are ‘labelled and forgotten’? | |
| Do service users feel that they receive adequate services and timely treatment? |
Workstation 2 - Education and higher education
| How can we research into ways in which knowledge can assist in recovery, and how knowledge becomes power in mental health? | |
| There is a cost associated with engagement in learning. How can learning be made accessible to all service users? | |
| What efforts are being made to promote understanding of mental illness through education from an early age in infant, primary and secondary schools? | |
| What are the elements of education as a vehicle for treatment and recovery? | |
| How can education provide a ‘centre of gravity’ for recovery? | |
| Comparison of educational methods to promote recovery (e.g. full time, part time, formal, community based, informal). | |
| How is it possible to find out what support services are available for people with mental health problems and how do they find out how to access these, particularly if their condition is undiagnosed? | |
| Comparison of the benefits for recovery of accessing or re-accessing learning against not accessing learning. | |
| What support goes hand in hand with educational opportunities for service users as a model for best practice (e.g. mentoring)? | |
| How can community based learning be integrated with Campus based learning? What support is available to help this process? | |
| How is it possible to choose the most suitable of all the different routes into education? | |
| Is it possible to quantify the reduction in the level of ‘sick days’ directly attributable to education? | |
| Is there any provision within educational establishments for course work and assessments to reflect the possible effects on performance due to cyclic events in the mental health of service user students? | |
| How does ‘disclosure’ of a mental health problem affect access to learner support in education? | |
| What provision is there within different communities for service users to access both academic and non-academic learning? | |
| How can service users progress from project/community provision to Higher Education? Is progression both horizontal and vertical for the learner? | |
| In what ways do service users value education e.g. as a social skill, by achieving social interaction, through progression, through certification? |
Workstation 3 – Stigma and attitudes
| How much money is spent on research into stigma and is this cost effective? | |
| What training do GPs receive to recognise and combat the effects of stigma? | |
| What are the attitudes of GPs, nurses and other NHS staff towards Mental Health service users? And do they receive training to combat the effects of stigma (their own and that of others)? | |
| How can attitudes of all staff within GP practices towards mental health service users be improved? | |
| Do service users experience ‘self-stigmatisation’? | |
| Is there enough initial support and information? What would be most helpful after initial diagnosis? | |
| Are labels useful? Is it possible to change the negative effect of labelling? Is it possible for service users to create their own (positive) labels? | |
| How can service users be provided with hope and direction to prevent self-stigma? | |
| Build a data bank of positive stories, in particular where negative labels were turned into positives. | |
| How can families of service users be helped to combat their lack of understanding, and be educated to recognise and react positively to the triggers and symptoms of mental distress? | |
| What causes people to have preconceived ideas about mental health? How can these be changed? | |
| Within family units, what causes people’s reactions to their family member who is experiencing mental illness? Is this different from their attitude to a stranger with mental illness? | |
| How much do the media affect people’s attitudes to mental illness? | |
| What terminology and labels are commonly used to describe people experiencing mental illness? | |
| What understanding do people (adults and children) have of mental illness and the effects of the labels used to describe it? |
Workstation 4 – Support services/crisis support
| What do professionals consider makes a crisis? | |
| Who makes decisions around services and service consistency? | |
| How are service user mentors and peer supporters involved with support services? | |
| How can service users teach professionals? | |
| Are there good models of partnership working between service users and groups of professionals? | |
| How are pre-crisis situations recognised? | |
| Is it possible for education to be prescribed as treatment? | |
| What are the attitudes of home-treatment workers? | |
| Do service users decide where and why they are treated in certain ways. Do they also have a say in the length of their treatment? | |
| Who decides what is a crisis? How does funding affect that decision? | |
| How do service users know what services are available? Is centralised information available i.e. a one stop shop? | |
| Does location affect what support is available? | |
| How is the quality of support measured? | |
| Why are there ‘reactive’ crisis teams but not ‘preventative’ crisis teams? | |
| What strategies are available to prevent crisis situations arising? | |
| What options are available during a crisis and what works? | |
| What support is out there and what are the criteria necessary to obtain support? | |
| Why are ‘non mental health’ professionals not educated in mental health issues? | |
| Do support services make you ill? | |
| What support do carers receive? |
Workstation 5 – Employment
| Can work be therapeutic? What is the role of employment in promoting physical and mental well-being? | |
| What are the positive contributions of employment to mental health e.g. focus, dedication? | |
| Is meaningful and appropriate work available to service users who may require an adapted environment, flexi time, specialist support etc.? | |
| What are the challenges of returning to work? | |
| What effect might the Health and Safety Act have on service users wishing to return to work? | |
| Is it possible to make a business case for employers to take on people with mental health issues? | |
| How can an ‘institutionalised’ service user be persuaded to return to work? | |
| How can employers be educated and encouraged to employ people with a mental health problem? | |
| Why do some employers have preconceived ideas that people with a disability will be less productive than others? | |
| Can people with mental health problems be of benefit to an employer? | |
| What support is there for people with mental health problems to become self-employed? | |
| Can service users going into employment be persuaded that, even if they lose benefits, they will increase their self-esteem? | |
| Is ‘transitional support’ available for people with mental health problems accessing or returning to employment? Is training and support provided for supporters? | |
| What are the positive effects of having a person with mental health problems in the work force? | |
| Is it possible to provide ‘Ambassadors’ to link employers with service users and to help overcome barriers to employment? | |
| Is there a difference in the ‘barriers’ to employment experienced by people with different types of mental illness e.g. bipolar disorder, schizophrenia? | |
| Is there discrimination against people with ‘sectionable’ illness in voluntary roles as well as in paid employment? | |
| What can be done to help service users achieve employment in their chosen field e.g. IT training etc. |
Workstation 6 – Other (any topic not covered by the other 5 workstations)
| How can service users become involved in research? Can they obtain training and help with the specialist language of research? Can research be made accessible to non-specialists? | |
| How can carers of service users become involved? | |
| Are activities available for carers out of the normal 9–5 h of the working day? | |
| How do service users get support to gain motivation and purpose? How frequently do ‘purpose’ and ‘motivation’ feature in recovery plans? | |
| What proportion of funding for mental health care goes to the voluntary sector? | |
| Are Welfare Reforms having a negative impact on mental health and thus making people more ill? | |
| The effects on mental health of childhood abuse | |
| How does the intervention of the law, including police and probation, impact on people with mental health problems? | |
| How do people help themselves? How do they benefit? What characteristics are needed for successful self-help? | |
| How is funding allocated between services? | |
| How can service users obtain support to maintain momentum towards recovery? | |
| Should the place of the pharmacist as expert over the GP be acknowledged and should the pharmacist be used more widely to explain drug treatment, side effects etc.? | |
| How widespread in treatment is recognition of the whole person, physical, mental and spiritual? | |
| Case studies – What do people do to aid their own recovery? What are individual trigger points? How do people learn from experience? How common are ‘circles of support’? | |
| How can research show that everyone is of value |
Benefits of engagement with people with experience of mental health services
| Benefits to the research | Benefits to the person with a lived experience of mental ill health |
|---|---|
| Anyone can experience mental ill health | Reduces the effects of stigma |
| First-hand experience | Acknowledges individual experience |
| Other life skills other than mental health experience | Self-development and education |
| Acknowledges the lived experience whilst gaining access to the knowledge associated with that experience | Feel valued and able to contribute |
| Services are more relevant and not wasted | Empowering and builds self esteem |
| Make informed decisions for the future that will benefit all based on this type of direct input into research projects | Therapeutic for all participants |
| People with lived experience have as much (if not more) insight into the problem / condition which may be overlooked by the academic | Knowledge development for all participants |
| To better ensure that services meet needs | Addresses legal and political rights |