Embedding the service user voice to co‐produce UK mental health nurse education—A lived experience narrative

Author:

O'Brien Sam1,Davenport Caroline1

Affiliation:

1. School of Nursing and Midwifery University of Hull Hull UK

Abstract

Accessible SummaryWhat is known on the subject? Co‐production aims to value service user voices and is increasingly used in healthcare. Less is known about how co‐production in nursing education is experienced by service users. What the paper adds to existing knowledge? This paper shares the experience of one service user who teaches student nurses in a UK university. For the first author, the paper highlights that co‐producing nurse education has been valuable and rewarding for both a service user and students. What are the implications for practice? Co‐production has the potential to benefit student nurses, including challenging their perceptions of ‘difficult’ patients. To achieve this, teaching sessions must be equally produced and delivered. By employing and including service users, universities have the potential to improve experiences for students and service users alike. AbstractIntroductionCo‐production is increasingly used in health care but there is less attention to a co‐produced mental health nurse education.AimThis article sought to explore the co‐production experiences of a service user who teaches mental health nurses, alongside the benefits of this to nurse education.MethodsThe article is a lived experience narrative co‐written with a nursing lecturer.ThesisCo‐produced mental health nurse education challenges students' perceptions towards self‐harm and encourages empathy and understanding of service user distress.Implications for PracticeCo‐production has many benefits to nurse education including a positive student experience, and validation of the service user experience to support meaningful recovery.

Publisher

Wiley

Reference9 articles.

1. Staff attitudes, beliefs and responses towards self-harm: a systematised literature review

2. Mental health nurses' resilience in the context of emotional labour: An interpretive qualitative study

3. Dixon J.(2019).A psychosocial approach to understanding the capacities to care and think critically in student mental health nurses. PhD thesis University of Nottingham.

4. Practitioner perspectives on service users experiences of targeted violence and hostility in mental health and adult safeguarding

5. Maile C.(2022).What do mental health nurses think and feel when the service user becomes their student nurse: Is it really ok not to be ok?Podcast to accompany poster. [audio recording (mp3)]https://hull‐repository.worktribe.com/output/4056938

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