11 results on '"Crowther, Adam"'
Search Results
2. Self-portrait, Marti Friedlander (2013)
- Author
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Crowther, Adam
- Published
- 2014
3. Evaluation of a new online cognitive remediation therapy (CIRCuiTSTM) training for mental health professionals.
- Author
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Taylor, Rumina, Crowther, Adam, Tinch‐Taylor, Rose, Lewin, Caroline da Cunha, Cali, Caterina, Reeder, Clare, Cella, Matteo, and Wykes, Til
- Subjects
- *
NATIONAL health services , *USER charges , *MENTAL health , *RESEARCH funding , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *INTERNET , *PROFESSIONAL employee training , *COGNITIVE therapy , *COGNITIVE remediation , *COGNITION - Abstract
Objective: Cognitive remediation (CR) improves cognition and aids recovery in people with psychosis. An active therapist provides increased benefit, but CR training for therapists is not routinely available, so CR has limited scalability. This study describes the development and evaluation of the first online CR therapist training programme. Methods: An online CR training, based on expert and novice therapist consultations, was developed, and then pilot tested with novice trainees and changes made to produce the evaluation version. Feasibility, acceptability, and training benefits were assessed in a group of naïve UK NHS mental health professionals. Training engagement with a group of clinicians who accessed the programme for professional development was compared to those who paid fees. Results: Most mental health professionals finished training and passed the knowledge test, indicating that training enhanced clinicians' knowledge. Fee‐paying trainees had significantly faster completion times and a higher proportion finished in the recommended time. Those who were successful at passing the knowledge questionnaire had significantly fewer years in practice. The majority were satisfied with the programme, felt they had made considerable progress and that training would allow them to begin practicing CR, and would recommend the training to colleagues. Conclusions: This online CR training programme was feasible, acceptable to participants and showed benefits for clinicians. It improved knowledge even in the most junior of staff who have had less time to develop clinical know‐how. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Development and Evaluation of a Recovery College Fidelity Measure.
- Author
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Toney, Rebecca, Knight, Jane, Hamill, Kate, Taylor, Anna, Henderson, Claire, Crowther, Adam, Meddings, Sara, Barbic, Skye, Jennings, Helen, Pollock, Kristian, Bates, Peter, Repper, Julie, and Slade, Mike
- Subjects
COLLEGE teachers ,SEMI-structured interviews ,LOYALTY ,SERVICE learning ,ADULT learning ,RESEARCH ,SOCIAL participation ,RESEARCH evaluation ,RESEARCH methodology ,EVALUATION research ,MEDICAL cooperation ,MEDICAL care research ,REHABILITATION of people with mental illness ,COMPARATIVE studies ,PSYCHOLOGICAL tests ,SCHOOLS ,IMPACT of Event Scale ,RESEARCH funding ,PATIENT education ,NONPROFESSIONAL education ,MENTAL health services - Abstract
Objective: Recovery Colleges are widespread, with little empirical research on their key components. This study aimed to characterize key components of Recovery Colleges and to develop and evaluate a developmental checklist and a quantitative fidelity measure.Methods: Key components were identified through a systematized literature review, international expert consultation (n = 77), and semistructured interviews with Recovery College managers across England (n = 10). A checklist was developed and refined through semistructured interviews with Recovery College students, trainers, and managers (n = 44) in 3 sites. A fidelity measure was adapted from the checklist and evaluated with Recovery College managers (n = 39, 52%), clinicians providing psychoeducational courses (n = 11), and adult education lecturers (n = 10).Results: Twelve components were identified, comprising 7 nonmodifiable components (Valuing Equality, Learning, Tailored to the Student, Coproduction of the Recovery College, Social Connectedness, Community Focus, and Commitment to Recovery) and 5 modifiable components (Available to All, Location, Distinctiveness of Course Content, Strengths Based, and Progressive). The checklist has service user student, peer trainer, and manager versions. The fidelity measure meets scaling assumptions and demonstrates adequate internal consistency (0.72), test-retest reliability (0.60), content validity, and discriminant validity.Conclusions: Coproduction and an orientation to adult learning should be the highest priority in developing Recovery Colleges. The creation of the first theory-based empirically evaluated developmental checklist and fidelity measure (both downloadable at researchintorecovery.com/recollect ) for Recovery Colleges will help service users understand what Recovery Colleges offer, will inform decision making by clinicians and commissioners about Recovery Colleges, and will enable formal evaluation of their impact on students. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Mechanisms of Action and Outcomes for Students in Recovery Colleges.
- Author
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Toney, Rebecca, Elton, Daniel, Munday, Emma, Hamill, Kate, Crowther, Adam, Meddings, Sara, Taylor, Anna, Henderson, Claire, Jennings, Helen, Waring, Justin, Pollock, Kristian, Bates, Peter, and Slade, Mike
- Subjects
MENTAL health services ,MENTAL health ,SELF-confidence ,SOCIAL capital ,HEALTH of college students ,COMPARATIVE studies ,INTERPERSONAL relations ,RESEARCH methodology ,EVALUATION of medical care ,MEDICAL cooperation ,POWER (Social sciences) ,RESEARCH ,RESEARCH funding ,SCHIZOPHRENIA ,STUDENTS ,UNIVERSITIES & colleges ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,EVALUATION research - Abstract
Objective: Recovery colleges are widespread, with little empirical research on how they work and the outcomes they produce. This study aimed to coproduce a change model characterizing mechanisms of action (how they work) and outcomes (their impact) for mental health service users who attend recovery colleges.Methods: A systematized review identified all publications about recovery colleges. Inductive collaborative data analysis of 10 key publications by academic researchers and coresearchers with lived experience informed a theoretical framework for mechanisms of action and student outcomes, which was refined through deductive analysis of 34 further publications. A change model was coproduced and refined through stakeholder interviews (N=33).Results: Four mechanisms of action for recovery colleges were identified: empowering environment (safety, respect, and supporting choices), enabling different relationships (power, peers, and working together), facilitating personal growth (for example, coproduced learning, strengths, and celebrating success), and shifting the balance of power through coproduction and reducing power differentials. Outcomes were change in the student (for example, self-understanding and self-confidence) and changes in the student's life (for example, occupational, social, and service use). A coproduced change model mapping mechanisms of action to outcomes was created.Conclusions: Key features differentiate recovery colleges from traditional services, including an empowering environment, enabling relationships, and growth orientation. Service users who lack confidence, those with whom services struggle to engage, those who will benefit from exposure to peer role models, and those lacking social capital may benefit most. As the first testable characterization of mechanisms and outcomes, the change model allows formal evaluation of recovery colleges. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Impact on the individual: what do patients and carers gain, lose and expect from being involved in research?
- Author
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Ashcroft, Joanne, Wykes, Til, Taylor, Joseph, Crowther, Adam, and Szmukler, George
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PSYCHOLOGY of caregivers ,CHI-squared test ,CUSTOMER satisfaction ,INTERVIEWING ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL research ,MOTIVATION (Psychology) ,RESEARCH funding ,STATISTICAL sampling ,SELF-evaluation ,SURVEYS ,PATIENT participation ,QUALITATIVE research ,DATA analysis ,QUANTITATIVE research ,THEMATIC analysis ,CROSS-sectional method ,PSYCHOLOGY of human research subjects ,DATA analysis software ,ATTITUDES toward illness - Abstract
Background: Study feasibility and deliverability can benefit from involving patients and carers in the research process, known as patient and public involvement (PPI). There is less evidence on the experiences of patients and carers themselves and we require more information across a range of studies, health conditions and research stages. Aims: This study explored how patients and carers in eight diagnostic research specialties have been involved in research, their motivations and the impact involvement had on them. Method: 143 patients and carers across the Clinical Research Network (CRN) responded to an online semi-structured questionnaire (developed using participatory methodology). Quantitative and qualitative data were analysed. Results: A range of benefits were reported, including providing a life focus and an improved relationship with illness. Less positive experiences regarding time and money and lack of acknowledgement were also reported, along with suggestions for improvement. Conclusions: PPI confers many benefits on patients and carers which could increase PPI recruitment if made explicit. More involvement in study recruitment and dissemination would increase the effectiveness of PPI input. Involving a more varied socioeconomic demographic and at an earlier stage is vital. Financial support for lower earners and greater feedback following involvement should also be explored. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Reviews.
- Author
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Mückler, Hermann, Ross, Cathy, Carter, Lyn, Jahnke, Robert, Tilburg, Marja van, Skinner, Deborah, Vercoe, Caroline, Simanu-Klutz, Luafata, Smith, Roy, Rimoldi, Eleanor, Wilson, Susan, Crowther, Adam, Leotta, Alfio, Sigley, Simon, and Phillipson, Allan
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CULTURE ,NONFICTION - Abstract
Oceania and the Victorian Imagination: Where all things are possible, Richard Fulton, Peter H. Hoffenberg (eds) (2013) Farnham: Ashgate Publishing, 220 pp., ISBN 978 1 4094 5711 4 (hbk), £54 William Colenso, His Life and Journeys by A.G. Bagnall and G.C. Petersen, Ian St George (ed.) (2012) Dunedin: Otago University Press, 496 pp., ISBN 978 1 8775 7815 1 (pbk), NZ$65 Huia Histories of Maori: Nga tahuhu korero, Danny Keenan (ed.) (2012) Wellington: Huia Publishing Ltd, 350 pp., ISBN 978 1 7755 0009 4 (pbk), NZ$49.99 E Tu Ake: Maori Standing Strong, Huhana Smith (2011) Wellington: Te Papa Press, 208 pp., ISBN 978 1 8773 8569 8 (pbk), NZ$49.95 Museums and Maori: Heritage Professionals, Indigenous Collections, Current Practice, Conal McCarthy (2011) Wellington: Te Papa Press, 288 pp., ISBN 978 1 8773 8570 4 (pbk), NZ$69.99 Education, Values and Ethics in International Heritage: Learning to Respect, Jeanette Atkinson (2014) Farnham: Ashgate, 238 pp., ISBN 978 1 4094 2895 4 (hbk), £60 Pacific Art in Detail, Jenny Newell (2011) Wellington: Te Papa, 144 pp., ISBN 978 1 8773 8575 9 (hbk), NZ$34.99 Tangata o le Moana: New Zealand and the People of the Pacific, Sean Mallon, Kolokesa Mahina-Tuai and Damon Salesa (eds) (2012) Wellington: Te Papa Press, 391 pp., ISBN 978 1 8773 8572 8 (pbk), NZ$79.99 Ma'i Lepera: Disease and Displacement in Nineteenth-Century Hawai'i, Kerri A. Inglis (2013) Honolulu: University of Hawai'i Press, 268 pp., ISBN 978 0 8248 3635 1 (pbk), US$24 Drinking Smoke: The Tobacco Syndemic in Oceania, Mac Marshall (2013) Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 312 pp., ISBN 978 0 8248 3685 6 (hbk), US$54 Specters of Violence in a Colonial Context: New Caledonia, 1917, Adrian Muckle (2012) Honolulu: University of Hawai'i Press, 272 pp., ISBN 978 0 8248 3509 5 (hbk), US$55 Vanishing Paradise: Art and Exoticism in Colonial Tahiti, Elizabeth C. Childs (2013) Oakland: University of California Press, 352 pp., ISBN 978 0 5202 7173 9 (hbk), US$49.95 Reconstructing Faces: The Art and Wartime Surgery of Gillies, Pickerill and Mowlem, Murray C. Meikle (2013) Dunedin: Otago University Press, 264 pp., ISBN 978 1 8775 7839 7 (hbk), NZ$60 Self-Portrait, Marti Friedlander (2013) Auckland: Auckland University Press, 264 pp., ISBN 978 1 8694 0784 1 (hbk), NZ$59.99 New Zealand Film: An Illustrated History, Diane Pivac, Frank Stark and Lawrence McDonald (eds) (2011) Wellington: Te Papa Press, 360 pp. (DVD included) ISBN 978 1 8773 8566 7 (hbk), NZ$84.99 Observations: Studies in New Zealand Documentary, Russell Campbell (2011) Wellington: Victoria University Press, 260 pp., ISBN 978 0 8647 3656 7 (pbk), NZ$50 The Blue Coat, Elizabeth Smither (2013) Auckland: Auckland University Press, 80 pp., ISBN 978 1 8694 0736 0 (pbk), NZ$24.99 The Lifeguard: Poems 2008-2013, Ian Wedde (2013) Auckland: Auckland University Press, 104 pp., ISBN 978 1 8694 0769 8 (pbk), NZ$27.99 Intercolonial, Stephen Oliver (2013) Auckland: Puriri Press, 76 pp., ISBN 978 0 9089 4340 1 (pbk), NZ$28.50 [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Who Uses Recovery Colleges? Casemix Analysis of Sociodemographic and Clinical Characteristics and Representativeness of Recovery College Students.
- Author
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Bowness, Bryher, Hayes, Daniel, Stepanian, Katy, Anfossi, Alessia, Taylor, Anna, Crowther, Adam, Meddings, Sara, Osman, Yasma, Grant, Jason, Repper, Julie, Ronaldson, A., Henderson, Claire, and Slade, Mike
- Subjects
- *
MENTAL illness treatment , *STATISTICS , *PSYCHOLOGY of college students , *SOCIAL support , *CONVALESCENCE , *MEDICAL care costs , *CULTURAL pluralism , *MEDICAL care use , *UNIVERSITIES & colleges , *SYMPTOMS , *CHI-squared test , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *RESEARCH funding , *SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors , *DATA analysis , *MENTAL illness , *MENTAL health services , *TRUST - Abstract
Objective: Recovery Colleges support recovery for adults with mental health problems, through coproduction and education principles. This study aimed to determine whether students at three Recovery Colleges in England were representative of mental health service users. Methods: Gender, age, ethnicity, diagnosis, involuntary detention, and inpatient admission were extracted from clinical records. Data for all service user students enrolled, and those who had attended 70% of a Recovery College course were compared to mental health services caseloads, using chi-square goodness-of-fit tests. Results: Clinical records were identified for 1,788 students. Significant differences were identified for gender, age, and diagnosis (p <.001). In some Colleges, more students had recent inpatient admissions or involuntary detentions. Conclusions and Implications for Practice: Service user students were largely representative of mental health service users, although some groups were underrepresented. Further research is needed to understand why, so that Recovery Colleges can continue to address inequalities. Impact and Implications: This is the first multisite investigation into the characteristics of Recovery College students. It found that students are largely representative of people using mental health services, at different stages of their recovery. However, Colleges and mental health services could work on improving access for male, younger and older service users, and individuals with certain mental health diagnoses. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. LETTERS.
- Author
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Dant, Rob, Thompson, Arthur, Crowther, Adam, and Low, Allen
- Subjects
ELECTRONIC surveillance ,CESSNA aircraft - Abstract
Several letters to the editor are presented including two regarding equipage of a cooperative surveillance technology on aircraft called the automatic dependent surveillance?broadcast (ADS?B) and one in response to an article on review of Cessna 310 aircraft in the December 2014 issue.
- Published
- 2015
10. Report Reveals 'Rising Tide' of Outside-Group Election Spending.
- Author
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Crowther, Adam
- Abstract
The article discusses the report "A Rising Tide" released by advocacy group Public Citizen regarding the election spending by outside groups. Topics discussed include the ruling of the U.S Supreme Court in Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission court case in which the court granted permission for limitless expenditure by corporations, New Jersey's "pay to play" law that prevents corporations from making campaign contributions and impact of investments made by the groups on local races.
- Published
- 2014
11. Evaluation of a new online cognitive remediation therapy (CIRCuiTS TM ) training for mental health professionals.
- Author
-
Taylor R, Crowther A, Tinch-Taylor R, Lewin CDC, Cali C, Reeder C, Cella M, and Wykes T
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Female, Adult, Health Personnel education, Feasibility Studies, Program Evaluation, Internet, United Kingdom, Pilot Projects, Clinical Competence, Cognitive Remediation methods
- Abstract
Objective: Cognitive remediation (CR) improves cognition and aids recovery in people with psychosis. An active therapist provides increased benefit, but CR training for therapists is not routinely available, so CR has limited scalability. This study describes the development and evaluation of the first online CR therapist training programme., Methods: An online CR training, based on expert and novice therapist consultations, was developed, and then pilot tested with novice trainees and changes made to produce the evaluation version. Feasibility, acceptability, and training benefits were assessed in a group of naïve UK NHS mental health professionals. Training engagement with a group of clinicians who accessed the programme for professional development was compared to those who paid fees., Results: Most mental health professionals finished training and passed the knowledge test, indicating that training enhanced clinicians' knowledge. Fee-paying trainees had significantly faster completion times and a higher proportion finished in the recommended time. Those who were successful at passing the knowledge questionnaire had significantly fewer years in practice. The majority were satisfied with the programme, felt they had made considerable progress and that training would allow them to begin practicing CR, and would recommend the training to colleagues., Conclusions: This online CR training programme was feasible, acceptable to participants and showed benefits for clinicians. It improved knowledge even in the most junior of staff who have had less time to develop clinical know-how., (© 2023 The Authors. Psychology and Psychotherapy: Theory, Research and Practice published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of The British Psychological Society.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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