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Something special, something unique: Perspectives of experts by experience in mental health nursing education on their contribution.

Authors :
Happell, Brenda
Warner, Terri
Waks, Shifra
O'Donovan, Aine
Manning, Fionnuala
Doody, Rory
Greaney, Sonya
Goodwin, John
Hals, Elisabeth
Griffin, Martha
Scholz, Brett
Granerud, Arild
Platania‐Phung, Chris
Russell, Siobhan
MacGabhann, Liam
Pulli, Jarmo
Vatula, Annaliina
van der Vaart, Kornelis Jan
Allon, Jerry
Bjornsson, Einar
Source :
Journal of Psychiatric & Mental Health Nursing (John Wiley & Sons, Inc.); Apr2022, Vol. 29 Issue 2, p346-358, 13p
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Accessible Summary: What is known on the subject: ●Expert by Experience participation in mental health services is embedded in mental health policy in many countries. The negative attitudes of nurses and other health professionals to consumer participation poses a significant obstacle to this policy goal.●Involving mental health Experts by Experience in the education of nursing students demonstrates positive attitudinal change. What the paper adds to existing knowledge: ●The paper presents perspectives from Experts by Experience about the unique knowledge and expertise they derive from their lived experience of mental distress and mental health service use. As a result, they can make a unique and essential contribution to mental health nursing education. They utilize this knowledge to create an interactive learning environment and encourage critical thinking.●The international focus of this research enriches understandings about how Experts by Experience might be perceived in a broader range of countries. What are the implications for practice: ●Mental health policy articulates the importance of service user involvement in all aspects of mental health service delivery. This goal will not be fully achieved without nurses having positive attitudes towards experts by experience as colleagues.●Positive attitudes are more likely to develop when nurses understand and value the contribution experts by experience bring by virtue of their unique knowledge and expertise. This paper provides some important insights to achieving this end. Introduction: Embedding lived experience in mental health nursing education is increasing, with research findings suggesting the impact is positive. To date, research has primarily targeted the perspectives of nursing students and academics from the health professions. Aim: To enhance understanding of the unique knowledge and expertise experts by experience contribute to mental health nursing education. Methods: Qualitative exploratory research methods were employed. In‐depth individual interviews were conducted with experts by experience who delivered a coproduced learning module to nursing students in Europe and Australia. Results: Participants described their unique and essential contribution to mental health nursing education under four main themes: critical thinking, beyond textbooks; interactive and open communication; understanding personal recovery; and mental health is health. Conclusions: These findings present an understanding of the unique knowledge and expertise Experts by Experience contribute to mental health education not previously addressed in the literature. Appreciating and respecting this, unique contribute is necessary as Expert by Experience contributions continue to develop. Implications for Practice: Mental health services purport to value service user involvement. Identifying and respecting and valuing the unique contribution they bring to services is essential. Without this understanding, tokenistic involvement may become a major barrier. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
13510126
Volume :
29
Issue :
2
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Journal of Psychiatric & Mental Health Nursing (John Wiley & Sons, Inc.)
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
155730436
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/jpm.12773