Consumer and staff perspectives of the implementation frequency and value of recovery and wellbeing oriented practices

Abstract Background Despite advances in our understanding of what mental health systems and services can do to enhance recovery and wellbeing outcomes for people seeking support, there is limited evidence demonstrating that this body of work has translated successfully into mental health service pra...

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Main Authors: Keren E. Wolstencroft, Frank P. Deane, Cara L. Jones, Adam Zimmermann, Merrilee Cox
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2018-10-01
Series:International Journal of Mental Health Systems
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13033-018-0244-9
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spelling doaj-62dc433bb46b4ae58fbd74d49c3d91a42020-11-25T00:04:56ZengBMCInternational Journal of Mental Health Systems1752-44582018-10-0112111410.1186/s13033-018-0244-9Consumer and staff perspectives of the implementation frequency and value of recovery and wellbeing oriented practicesKeren E. Wolstencroft0Frank P. Deane1Cara L. Jones2Adam Zimmermann3Merrilee Cox4Neami NationalIllawarra Institute for Mental Health, School of Psychology, University of WollongongSchool of Psychology, University of WollongongKPMG Australia Services Pty Ltd.Mental Health Association of Central AustraliaAbstract Background Despite advances in our understanding of what mental health systems and services can do to enhance recovery and wellbeing outcomes for people seeking support, there is limited evidence demonstrating that this body of work has translated successfully into mental health service practice. The Collaborative Recovery Model (CRM) is a practice framework that has been designed to support application of recovery and wellbeing oriented principles and practices within mental health service delivery. The aims of this study were to assess consumer and staff perceptions of implementation frequency during service engagement and the value of this approach for assisting recovery within a setting where the CRM approach had been adopted. Methods The setting was a large Australian community managed mental health organisation. The study involved a cross-sectional analysis of consumer (n = 116) and staff practitioner (n = 62) perspectives. A series of paired sample t-tests assessed for differences between consumer and staff perceptions of the: (i) importance of key practice elements for assisting recovery, and the (ii) frequency that key practice elements are utilised during engagement sessions. Spearman’s r correlational analysis explored associations between importance, frequency and helpfulness of sessions. Results Key practice elements of the model were applied during service interactions at a high level and perceived by the majority of consumers and staff participants as being important or very important for assisting recovery. Significant moderate correlations were found between the extent that practice elements were valued and the level at which they were applied. Higher levels of implementation of CRM practices were associated with higher ratings of perceived session helpfulness. The strongest association was between ‘encouragement to set tasks to complete between support visits’ and perceived helpfulness. Conclusions Consumer and staff responses revealed that the key practice elements of the CRM were frequently implemented during service engagement interactions and were seen as valuable for assisting recovery. The level of agreement between raters suggests firstly, that the key practice elements were apparent and able to be rated as occurring, and secondly that the CRM approach is seen as responsive to consumer needs. The results have implications for translating recovery and wellbeing oriented knowledge into mental health service practice.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13033-018-0244-9RecoveryWellbeingMental healthServicePracticeImplementation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Keren E. Wolstencroft
Frank P. Deane
Cara L. Jones
Adam Zimmermann
Merrilee Cox
spellingShingle Keren E. Wolstencroft
Frank P. Deane
Cara L. Jones
Adam Zimmermann
Merrilee Cox
Consumer and staff perspectives of the implementation frequency and value of recovery and wellbeing oriented practices
International Journal of Mental Health Systems
Recovery
Wellbeing
Mental health
Service
Practice
Implementation
author_facet Keren E. Wolstencroft
Frank P. Deane
Cara L. Jones
Adam Zimmermann
Merrilee Cox
author_sort Keren E. Wolstencroft
title Consumer and staff perspectives of the implementation frequency and value of recovery and wellbeing oriented practices
title_short Consumer and staff perspectives of the implementation frequency and value of recovery and wellbeing oriented practices
title_full Consumer and staff perspectives of the implementation frequency and value of recovery and wellbeing oriented practices
title_fullStr Consumer and staff perspectives of the implementation frequency and value of recovery and wellbeing oriented practices
title_full_unstemmed Consumer and staff perspectives of the implementation frequency and value of recovery and wellbeing oriented practices
title_sort consumer and staff perspectives of the implementation frequency and value of recovery and wellbeing oriented practices
publisher BMC
series International Journal of Mental Health Systems
issn 1752-4458
publishDate 2018-10-01
description Abstract Background Despite advances in our understanding of what mental health systems and services can do to enhance recovery and wellbeing outcomes for people seeking support, there is limited evidence demonstrating that this body of work has translated successfully into mental health service practice. The Collaborative Recovery Model (CRM) is a practice framework that has been designed to support application of recovery and wellbeing oriented principles and practices within mental health service delivery. The aims of this study were to assess consumer and staff perceptions of implementation frequency during service engagement and the value of this approach for assisting recovery within a setting where the CRM approach had been adopted. Methods The setting was a large Australian community managed mental health organisation. The study involved a cross-sectional analysis of consumer (n = 116) and staff practitioner (n = 62) perspectives. A series of paired sample t-tests assessed for differences between consumer and staff perceptions of the: (i) importance of key practice elements for assisting recovery, and the (ii) frequency that key practice elements are utilised during engagement sessions. Spearman’s r correlational analysis explored associations between importance, frequency and helpfulness of sessions. Results Key practice elements of the model were applied during service interactions at a high level and perceived by the majority of consumers and staff participants as being important or very important for assisting recovery. Significant moderate correlations were found between the extent that practice elements were valued and the level at which they were applied. Higher levels of implementation of CRM practices were associated with higher ratings of perceived session helpfulness. The strongest association was between ‘encouragement to set tasks to complete between support visits’ and perceived helpfulness. Conclusions Consumer and staff responses revealed that the key practice elements of the CRM were frequently implemented during service engagement interactions and were seen as valuable for assisting recovery. The level of agreement between raters suggests firstly, that the key practice elements were apparent and able to be rated as occurring, and secondly that the CRM approach is seen as responsive to consumer needs. The results have implications for translating recovery and wellbeing oriented knowledge into mental health service practice.
topic Recovery
Wellbeing
Mental health
Service
Practice
Implementation
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13033-018-0244-9
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