Literature DB >> 29577537

Peer work in Open Dialogue: A discussion paper.

Brett Bellingham1, Niels Buus2,3,4,5, Andrea McCloughen2, Lisa Dawson5, Richard Schweizer6, Kristof Mikes-Liu1, Amy Peetz5, Katherine Boydell7, Jo River2,5.   

Abstract

Open Dialogue is a resource-oriented approach to mental health care that originated in Finland. As Open Dialogue has been adopted across diverse international healthcare settings, it has been adapted according to contextual factors. One important development in Open Dialogue has been the incorporation of paid, formal peer work. Peer work draws on the knowledge and wisdom gained through lived experience of distress and hardship to establish mutual, reciprocal, and supportive relationships with service users. As Open Dialogue is now being implemented across mental health services in Australia, stakeholders are beginning to consider the role that peer workers might have in this model of care. Open Dialogue was not, initially, conceived to include a specific role for peers, and there is little available literature, and even less empirical research, in this area. This discussion paper aims to surface some of the current debates and ideas about peer work in Open Dialogue. Examples and models of peer work in Open Dialogue are examined, and the potential benefits and challenges of adopting this approach in health services are discussed. Peer work in Open Dialogue could potentially foster democracy and disrupt clinical hierarchies, but could also move peer work from reciprocal to a less symmetrical relationship of 'giver' and 'receiver' of care. Other models of care, such as lived experience practitioners in Open Dialogue, can be conceived. However, it remains uncertain whether the hierarchical structures in healthcare and current models of funding would support any such models.
© 2018 Australian College of Mental Health Nurses Inc.

Keywords:  capacity building; delivery of health care; health personnel; mental health services; stakeholder participation

Mesh:

Year:  2018        PMID: 29577537     DOI: 10.1111/inm.12457

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Ment Health Nurs        ISSN: 1445-8330            Impact factor:   3.503


  2 in total

Review 1.  Dialogue as a Response to the Psychiatrization of Society? Potentials of the Open Dialogue Approach.

Authors:  Sebastian von Peter; Tomi Bergstrøm; Irene Nenoff-Herchenbach; Mark Steven Hopfenbeck; Raffaella Pocobello; Volkmar Aderhold; Mauricio Alvarez-Monjaras; Jaakko Seikkula; Kolja Heumann
Journal:  Front Sociol       Date:  2021-12-22

2.  Peer supported Open Dialogue in the National Health Service: implementing and evaluating a new approach to Mental Health Care.

Authors:  Catherine Kinane; James Osborne; Yasmin Ishaq; Marcus Colman; Douglas MacInnes
Journal:  BMC Psychiatry       Date:  2022-02-22       Impact factor: 3.630

  2 in total

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