Is co-production working well in recovery colleges? Emergent themes from a systematic narrative review

Author:

Bester Karen Louise,McGlade Anne,Darragh Eithne

Abstract

Purpose “Co-production” is a process in health and social care wherein service users and practitioners work in partnership. Recovery colleges (RCs) are educational establishments offering mental health education; a cornerstone feature is that courses are designed and delivered in parity by both mental health practitioners and “peers” – people with lived experience of mental illness. This paper aims to consider, through the identification of key themes, whether co-production within RCs is operating successfully. Design/methodology/approach The paper is a systematic review of qualitative literature. Relevant concept groups were systematically searched using three bibliographic databases: Medline, Social Care Online and Scopus. Articles were quality appraised and then synthesised through inductive thematic analysis and emergent trends identified. Findings Synthesis identified three key themes relating to the impact of co-production in RCs: practitioner attitudes, power dynamics between practitioners and service users, and RCs’ relationships with their host organisations. As a result of RC engagement, traditional practitioner/patient hierarchies were found to be eroding. Practitioners felt they were more person-centred. RCs can model good co-productive practices to their host organisations. The review concluded, with some caveats, that RC co-production was of high fidelity. Originality/value RC research is growing, but the body of evidence remains relatively small. Most of what exists examine the impact of RCs on individuals’ overall recovery and mental health; there is a limited empirical investigation into whether their flagship feature of parity between peers and practitioners is genuine.

Publisher

Emerald

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health,Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management,Health Policy,Education,Pshychiatric Mental Health,Health (social science)

Reference38 articles.

1. Anfossi, A. (2017), “The current state of recovery colleges in the UK: final report”, ImROC: Nottingham, available at: http://imroc.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/12/The-current-state-of-Recovery-Colleges-in-the-UK1-1.pdf (accessed 27 February 2021).

2. Bester, K.L. and Corrigan, J. (2017), “Personality disorder in Northern Ireland: service user research on service provision and user involvement”, Paper presented to the Public Health Agency, Health and Social Care Board, Department of Health (Northern Ireland), Patient Client Council and Regulatory and Quality Improvement Authority, Belfast, 14 September 2017.

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