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Service User Involvement in Recovery-Oriented Care Planning: A Realist Synthesis

AIMS: Service user involvement (SUI) in recovery-oriented care planning (ROCP) warrants more sophisticated theorisation and explanation to support practice improvement. This study investigated which changes to practice work best, in what circumstances, and to what extent, to embed an active role for...

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Autores principales: John, Thomas, Billings, Jenny, Wilson, Patricia
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cambridge University Press 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9378175/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/bjo.2022.202
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author John, Thomas
Billings, Jenny
Wilson, Patricia
author_facet John, Thomas
Billings, Jenny
Wilson, Patricia
author_sort John, Thomas
collection PubMed
description AIMS: Service user involvement (SUI) in recovery-oriented care planning (ROCP) warrants more sophisticated theorisation and explanation to support practice improvement. This study investigated which changes to practice work best, in what circumstances, and to what extent, to embed an active role for service users’ involvement in ROCP during the acute inpatient mental health care pathway. METHODS: A realist synthesis, combined with qualitative methods, was conducted to theoretically explore the causal mechanisms that underlie SUI in ROCP and how contextual factors influence the link between these causal mechanisms and outcomes. The study was conducted in three stages: theory-gleaning, theory-refinement and theory-consolidation. Initial programme theories were developed in the theory-gleaning stage. Theories were refined iteratively in the theory-refinement stage, using evidence from a realist review and interview data. With stakeholder involvement, refined programme theories were finely tuned using ‘if-then’ statements in the consolidation stage. RESULTS: 1. ‘Provider-controlled care transition’ (admission to acute inpatient mental health units), referring to limitations to service users’ active involvement. The focus of care and access to acute inpatients units should be needs-led, rather than resource-led or demand-driven; 2. ‘Care plan as a recovery tool?’ – addressing infrastructural and organisational limitations to active SUI in care-plan formulation. The use of multidisciplinary meetings as a forum for care-plan formulation can create a cohesive approach and facilitate shared ownership; 3. ‘Ward rounds as a non-inclusive arena for shared decision making’, highlighting their unfulfilled potential for shared decision making about treatment. Professionals should focus on preparing service users for the ward-round process. Opportunities and access for service users to build therapeutic relationships with treating doctors are vital components; 4. ‘Peer support worker intervention' as a key factor in service users’ recovery’, concerning their positive impact. Their presence in ward rounds and care-planning meetings might create a more user-friendly atmosphere for service users; and 5. ‘Provider-controlled care transition’ (discharge from acute inpatient mental health units), increasing focus on preparing service users for transition into the community, and constraints on resources should not dictate or anticipate decisions on discharging service users. CONCLUSION: The study identified practices required to embed an active role for service users to be involved in ROCP, namely multi-contextual interventions at various levels (macro, meso and micro) of the mental health system. The study uncovered barriers that restrain SUI in ROCP, impacting desirable outcomes.
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spelling pubmed-93781752022-08-18 Service User Involvement in Recovery-Oriented Care Planning: A Realist Synthesis John, Thomas Billings, Jenny Wilson, Patricia BJPsych Open Research AIMS: Service user involvement (SUI) in recovery-oriented care planning (ROCP) warrants more sophisticated theorisation and explanation to support practice improvement. This study investigated which changes to practice work best, in what circumstances, and to what extent, to embed an active role for service users’ involvement in ROCP during the acute inpatient mental health care pathway. METHODS: A realist synthesis, combined with qualitative methods, was conducted to theoretically explore the causal mechanisms that underlie SUI in ROCP and how contextual factors influence the link between these causal mechanisms and outcomes. The study was conducted in three stages: theory-gleaning, theory-refinement and theory-consolidation. Initial programme theories were developed in the theory-gleaning stage. Theories were refined iteratively in the theory-refinement stage, using evidence from a realist review and interview data. With stakeholder involvement, refined programme theories were finely tuned using ‘if-then’ statements in the consolidation stage. RESULTS: 1. ‘Provider-controlled care transition’ (admission to acute inpatient mental health units), referring to limitations to service users’ active involvement. The focus of care and access to acute inpatients units should be needs-led, rather than resource-led or demand-driven; 2. ‘Care plan as a recovery tool?’ – addressing infrastructural and organisational limitations to active SUI in care-plan formulation. The use of multidisciplinary meetings as a forum for care-plan formulation can create a cohesive approach and facilitate shared ownership; 3. ‘Ward rounds as a non-inclusive arena for shared decision making’, highlighting their unfulfilled potential for shared decision making about treatment. Professionals should focus on preparing service users for the ward-round process. Opportunities and access for service users to build therapeutic relationships with treating doctors are vital components; 4. ‘Peer support worker intervention' as a key factor in service users’ recovery’, concerning their positive impact. Their presence in ward rounds and care-planning meetings might create a more user-friendly atmosphere for service users; and 5. ‘Provider-controlled care transition’ (discharge from acute inpatient mental health units), increasing focus on preparing service users for transition into the community, and constraints on resources should not dictate or anticipate decisions on discharging service users. CONCLUSION: The study identified practices required to embed an active role for service users to be involved in ROCP, namely multi-contextual interventions at various levels (macro, meso and micro) of the mental health system. The study uncovered barriers that restrain SUI in ROCP, impacting desirable outcomes. Cambridge University Press 2022-06-20 /pmc/articles/PMC9378175/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/bjo.2022.202 Text en © The Author(s) 2022 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research
John, Thomas
Billings, Jenny
Wilson, Patricia
Service User Involvement in Recovery-Oriented Care Planning: A Realist Synthesis
title Service User Involvement in Recovery-Oriented Care Planning: A Realist Synthesis
title_full Service User Involvement in Recovery-Oriented Care Planning: A Realist Synthesis
title_fullStr Service User Involvement in Recovery-Oriented Care Planning: A Realist Synthesis
title_full_unstemmed Service User Involvement in Recovery-Oriented Care Planning: A Realist Synthesis
title_short Service User Involvement in Recovery-Oriented Care Planning: A Realist Synthesis
title_sort service user involvement in recovery-oriented care planning: a realist synthesis
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9378175/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/bjo.2022.202
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