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Changing nursing student attitudes to consumer participation in mental health services: A survey study of traditional and lived experience-led education

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 05:45 authored by Louise ByrneLouise Byrne, Chris Platania-Phung, Brenda Happell, Scott Harris, Julie Bradshaw
Mental health policy emphasises the importance of consumer participation in mental health services. To align education with policy and orient future healthcare services to active consumer involvement, the potential of academics with a lived experience of mental illness to impact on student attitudes towards consumer participation needs to be examined. A cohort comparative study was undertaken comparing attitudinal change between undergraduate nursing students undertaking two different mental health courses, one nurse-led (n = 61) and one lived experience-led. Attitudes were measured through the Mental Health Consumer Participation Questionnaire. Within-cohort change was assessed via dependent sample t-tests, and degree of change was observed in each cohort, by comparing effect sizes. For the nurse-led course, attitudes on consumer involvement t (60) =-1.79, p < 0.005 (95% CI:-2.84,-0.74) and consumer as staff t (60) =-4.12, p < 0.005 (95% CI:-3.34,-1.16), positively changed with effect size r of 0.40 and 0.47, respectively. For the lived experience-led course, attitudes on consumer capacity t (109) =-3.63, p < 0.005 (95% CI:-0.48,-1.41) and consumer as staff, t (109) =-5.63, p < 0.005 (95% CI:-0.97,-0.46), positively changed, effect size r of 0.33 and 0.47, respectively. Mental health nursing education has a positive and selective influence on attitudes to consumer participation. Lived experience-led education was more beneficial in changing attitudes to consumer capacity and both types of education had similar positive effects on attitudes to consumers as staff.

History

Journal

Issues in Mental Health Nursing

Volume

35

Issue

9

Start page

704

End page

712

Total pages

9

Publisher

Taylor and Francis

Place published

United States

Language

English

Copyright

© 2014 Informa Healthcare

Former Identifier

2006078791

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2017-10-10

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