Staff experiences of a novel in‐reach rehabilitation and recovery service for people with profound and enduring mental health needs

Author:

Smith Penn1ORCID,Thompson Alison2,Madill Anna3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Education, Language and Psychology York St John University York UK

2. Leeds and York Partnership NHS Foundation Trust Leeds UK

3. School of Psychology University of Leeds Leeds UK

Abstract

AbstractThis organizational case study addresses the research question: What are the experiences of staff who work in a novel in‐reach rehabilitation and recovery service for people with profound and enduring mental health needs? Fifteen purposefully sampled staff were recruited from across a novel mental health service that embeds the community sector within inpatient provision. The sample comprises twelve National Health Service and three community voluntary organization staff (four men and eleven women). Data were generated via photo‐elicitation in which interviews focused on the photographs participants brought to help convey their experiences of the Service. Interpretative phenomenological analysis was used to analyse the transcripts. The analysis demonstrates that participants are oriented towards five ‘meta‐questions’: What is recovery? Who is valued and how is it demonstrated? Why are you frustrated in doing the best job you can and what support do you need? How can change occur in staff practices and approaches in an environment embedded in history? and How do we make the Service work in the context of constraints? Eight paired themes were also identified regarding staff experience of the Service: hope and individuality; culture and power; communication and confidence; accountability and limitations. The conclusions of this organizational case study have wide relevance to clinical practice: staff (i) place importance on promoting and developing greater awareness of different approaches to care; (ii) aspire to develop better communication across multidisciplinary teams and (iii) desire greater awareness of the complexities of risk to improve staff confidence.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Pshychiatric Mental Health

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