| Literature DB >> 31353779 |
Julia Bocking1,2, Brenda Happell3, Brett Scholz1, Aine Horgan4, John Goodwin4, Mari Lahti5, Chris Platania-Phung3, Liam MacGabhann6, Sonya Greaney4, Arild Granerud7, Martha Griffin6, Siobhan Russell6, Einar Bjornsson8, Kornelis Jan van der Vaart9, Heikki Ellilä5, Elisabeth Hals7, Rory Doody4, Annaliina Vatula5, Jarmo Pulli5, Fionnuala Manning4, Jerry Allon9, Pall Biering8.
Abstract
Consumer participation is a clear expectation of contemporary mental health policy. Most activity has concentrated in direct service delivery, and academic roles for mental health consumers have been slow to establish. An international project was undertaken to implement and evaluate meaningful consumer involvement in mental health nursing education. A learning module was co-produced between 'Experts by Experience' (drawing on experience of mental distress and service use) and Mental Health Nurse Academics. This qualitative exploratory study aimed to capture how Experts by Experience perceive their contribution. Interviews were undertaken with Experts by Experience who delivered the learning module. Data were analysed thematically and subsequently interpreted with Critical Social Theory. Two main themes emerged from the findings: 'there wasn't a barrier' described how personal narratives enhanced relationships between Experts by Experience and students; and 'made the human being visible', described their experiences of allowing students to see the person behind a diagnosis. These findings suggest Experts by Experience teaching is valuable and potentially a tool in redressing stigma. Addressing poor public perceptions could attract higher numbers of quality practitioners to mental health and meet identified workforce shortages. The findings presented here strengthen the evidence base for Expert by Experience roles in mental health professional education. These findings can be considered in international curricula reviews and aid progress towards a more socio-political, humanistic focus in mental health nursing, congruent with rights-based reform agendas.Entities:
Keywords: consumer participation; experts by experience; mental health; mental health nursing; nursing education; stigma
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31353779 DOI: 10.1111/inm.12635
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Ment Health Nurs ISSN: 1445-8330 Impact factor: 3.503