| Literature DB >> 31516732 |
Helen Brooks1, Irmansyah Irmansyah2,3, Herni Susanti4, Bagus Utomo5, Benny Prawira6, Livia Iskandar7,8, Erminia Colucci9, Budi-Anna Keliat4, Karen James10, Penny Bee11, Vicky Bell11, Karina Lovell11,12.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Public engagement events are an important early strategy in developing a meaningful research agenda, which is more impactful and beneficial to the population. Evidence indicates the potential of such activities to promote mental health literacy. However, this has not yet been explored in Indonesia. AIM: This paper describes a mental health public engagement festival carried out in Indonesia in November 2018 and uses evaluation data to consider the acceptability and use of such activities in Indonesia in the future.Entities:
Keywords: Co-production; Festival; Mental health; Patient and public involvement; Public engagement; Research prioritisation
Year: 2019 PMID: 31516732 PMCID: PMC6728994 DOI: 10.1186/s40900-019-0161-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Res Involv Engagem ISSN: 2056-7529
Festival activities and attendance
| Session | Details | Attendance | Led by |
|---|---|---|---|
| 12 November (am) | |||
| Public lecture | 4 lectures from Indonesian and UK mental health experts | 122 | Universitas Indonesia/Ministry of Health, Indonesia, University of Manchester |
| Introduction to Komunitas Peduli Skizofrenia Indonesia (KPSI) | Learn about the work of KPSI | 122 | KPSI, Indonesia |
| 12 November (pm) | |||
| Introduction to current research | Introduction to two ongoing mental health projects in Indonesia (IGNITE and IIMPETUS) | 47 | Ministry of Health, Indonesia |
| Memory Of My Face film screening and Q&A | Film screening of a patient story about the experience of and recovery from mental illness. | 47 | Health professionals and service user/family cast, Indonesia and film maker (University of Middlesex) |
| 13th November (am) | |||
| Interactive session on bullying | Hurt or Help: How to prevent bullying and suicide (sharing stories about bullying and suicide in young people) | 32 | Into the Light Indonesia, BTS Army Indonesia Amino, BTS Army Help Center |
| 13th November (pm) | Invest in Youth Mental Health – Talk show series | 30 | Pulih at the Peak and Universitas Indonesia |
| 14th November (am) | Research prioritisation event | 87 | Universitas Indonesia/University of Liverpool/University of Manchester |
| 14th November (pm) | |||
| Visual methods | Mental health training for journalists | 47 | University of Middlesex |
| Learn about our work | Learn about the work of Pulih at the Peak | 47 | Pulih at the Peak, Indonesia |
| ‘Breaking the Chains’ film screening and Q&A with cast | 47 | Service users, carers, community members (Indonesia) and film maker (University of Middlesex) | |
| 15th November (am) | |||
| Exercise class | Sweat Out Your Stress (physical activity and mental health) | 51 | Into the Light Indonesia, Fit-BID and Manhunt Indonesia, Indonesia. |
| 15th November (pm) | Poetry workshop | 32 | Pulih at the Peak, Indonesia |
| 16th November (am) | Talk show event with family members of people who died by suicide | 108 | Mental Health Association, Indonesia |
| 16th November (pm) | Learn about the work of Into the Light | 64 | Into the Light, Indonesia |
| Film screening of patient story of experience of and recovery from pasung and Q&A session | 64 | Service user cast (Indonesia) and film maker (University of Middlesex) | |
| 17th November (am) | Film Screening Lalui Luka: A daughter’s journey and discussion with panel of service users, carers and professionals | 117 | Into The Light Indonesia, Faculty of Psychology at the University of Gadjah Mada, SHINee World Indonesia, and suicide loss survivors. |
| 17th November (pm) | Digital exhibition of service user art | 117 | Faculty of Nursing, Universitas Indonesia - Ikatan Perawatan Kesehatan Jiwa Indonesia (IPKJI) |
| Q&A session with service users and professionals about the experience of mental health | 117 | ||
Demographic data of attendees
| % ( | |
|---|---|
| Gender | |
| Female | 88.6% ( |
| Male | 10.8% ( |
| Age | |
| Mean | 22.5 years |
| Range | 17–51 years |
| Role | |
| Student | 50.3% ( |
| Patient or public attendee | 20.4% ( |
| Professional | 5.3% ( |
| Missing | 24.1% ( |
| How attendees heard about the festival | |
| Social Media | 28.4% ( |
| Colleagues | 28.1% ( |
| Poster/flyer | 5.6% ( |
| Other organisation | 9.0% ( |
| Other | 21.9% ( |
| Missing | 8.0%( |
| Reasons for attending | |
| Interest in or relevance of topic | 46.9% ( |
| Wanted to increase knowledge and experience | 32.1% ( |
| Invited | 6.5% ( |
| No specific reason | 4.0% ( |
| To share experience/represent community | 3.4% ( |
| Opportunity to hear named speakers | 3.1% ( |
| Missing | 4.3% ( |
Festival evaluation
| % ( | |
|---|---|
| Overall quality rating of festival | |
| Excellent | 6.5% ( |
| Good | 85.8% ( |
| Average | 4.9% ( |
| Poor | 0.3% ( |
| Missing | 2.5% ( |
| Total | 324 |
| Has it increased your understanding of mental health problems? | |
| Yes | 79.9% ( |
| No | 0.9% ( |
| Missing | 19.1% ( |
| Total | 324 |
| Has it increased the likelihood that you would get involved in health research in the future? | |
| Yes | 72.2% ( |
| No | 2.5% ( |
| Unsure | 21.6% ( |
| Missing | 3.7% ( |
| Total | 324 |
| I felt moved or inspired | |
| Strongly agree | 18.5% ( |
| Agree | 70.7% ( |
| Neither agree nor disagree | 6.5% ( |
| Disagree | 0.9% ( |
| Missing | 3.4% ( |
| Total | 324 |
| I felt engaged in the experience | |
| Strongly agree | 14.2% ( |
| Agree | 63.6% ( |
| Neither agree nor disagree | 18.5% ( |
| Disagree | 0.3% ( |
| Missing | 3.4% ( |
| Total | 324 |
| I was exposed to new points of view or ways of thinking about things | |
| Strongly agree | 20.7% ( |
| Agree | 68.8% ( |
| Neither agree nor disagree | 6.5% ( |
| Disagree | 0.3% ( |
| Missing | 3.4% ( |
| Total | 324 |
| It made me want to know more about what I was seeing | |
| Strongly agree | 24.1% ( |
| Agree | 63.6% ( |
| Neither agree nor disagree | 7.7% ( |
| Disagree | 0.6% ( |
| Missing | 3.7% ( |
| Total | 324 |
| It felt relevant to our society and the times we live in | |
| Strongly agree | 33.3% ( |
| Agree | 60.8% ( |
| Neither agree nor disagree | 2.2% ( |
| Disagree | 0.3% ( |
| Missing | 3.4% ( |
| Total | 324 |