Co‐design and evaluation of a multidisciplinary teaching resource on mental health recovery involving people with lived experience

Author:

Arblaster Karen1ORCID,Mackenzie Lynette2ORCID,Buus Niels3ORCID,Chen Timothy4ORCID,Gill Katherine2ORCID,Gomez Lisa2,Hamilton Deborah2,Hancock Nicola2ORCID,McCloughen Andrea5,Nicholson Margaret6ORCID,Quinn Yvette2,River Jo7ORCID,Scanlan Justin Newton2ORCID,Schneider Carl4ORCID,Schweizer Richard2,Wells Karen2

Affiliation:

1. Research and Strategic Partnerships Nepean Blue Mountains Local Health District Penrith NSW Australia

2. Discipline of Occupational Therapy, School of Health Sciences, Faculty of Medicine and Health The University of Sydney Camperdown NSW Australia

3. Monash Nursing and Midwifery, Faculty of Medicine, Nursing and Health Sciences Monash University Melbourne Australia

4. School of Pharmacy, Faculty of Medicine and Health The University of Sydney Camperdown NSW Australia

5. School of Nursing, Faculty of Medicine and Health The University of Sydney Camperdown NSW Australia

6. Nutrition & Dietetics Group, School of Life & Environmental Sciences, Faculty of Science The University of Sydney Camperdown NSW Australia

7. Faculty of Health University of Technology Sydney NSW Australia

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundStudents from a range of health disciplines need to learn from people with lived experience of mental distress and recovery to develop recovery capabilities for mental health practice.AimsThe aims of this study are to describe the co‐design of a teaching resource, to explore the experience of people with lived experience during the resource development, and to evaluate the outcome of the resource on student recovery capabilities.MethodUsing a sequential mixed method, a project group consisting of six people with lived experience and 10 academics from five health disciplines was convened to co‐develop teaching resources. People with lived experience met independently without researchers on several occasions to decide on the key topics and met with the research team monthly. The teaching resource was used in mental health subjects for two health professional programmes, and the Capabilities for Recovery‐Oriented Practice Questionnaire (CROP‐Q) was used before and after to measure any change in student recovery capabilities. Scores were compared using the Wilcoxon signed rank test. The people with lived experience were also interviewed about their experience of being involved in constructing the teaching resources. Interviews were audiotaped, transcribed, and analysed thematically.ResultsThe finished resource consisted of 28 short videos and suggested teaching plans. Occupational therapy and nursing student scores on the CROP‐Q prior to using the educational resource (n = 33) were 68 (median) and post scores (n = 28) were 74 (median), indicating a statistically significant improvement in recovery capability (P = 0.04). Lived experience interview themes were (i) the importance of lived experience in education; (ii) personal benefits of participating; (iii) co‐design experience; and (iv) creating the resource.ConclusionCo‐design of teaching resources with people with lived experience was pivotal to the success and quality of the final product, and people with lived experience described personal benefits of participating in resource development. More evidence to demonstrate the use of the CROP‐Q in teaching and practice is needed.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Occupational Therapy

Reference40 articles.

1. Arblaster K.(2020).Investing in the future: Integrating lived experience perspectives in mental health curriculum design and evaluation in entry‐level occupational therapy education.https://hdl.handle.net/2123/23417

2. Capabilities for recovery-oriented practice in mental health occupational therapy: A thematic analysis of lived experience perspectives

3. Learning from consumers: An eDelphi study of Australian mental health consumers’ priorities for recovery-oriented curricula

4. Mental health consumer participation in education: a structured literature review

5. Australian Association of Social Workers. (2012[revised January 2015]).Australian social work education and accreditation standards. Retrieved 6 January 2020 fromhttp://www.aasw.asn.au/document/item/100

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