Mental health service engagement with family and carers: what practices are fundamental?

Darryl Maybery, Irene Casey Jaffe, Rose Cuff, Zoe Duncan, Anne Grant, Melissa Kennelly, Torleif Ruud, Bjorg Eva Skogoy, Bente Weimand, Andrea Reupert

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

15 Citations (Scopus)
107 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

Substantial and important benefits flow to all stakeholders, including the service user, when mental health services meaningfully engage with carers and family members. Government policies around the world clearly supports inclusiveness however health service engagement with family and carers remains sporadic, possibly because how best to engage is unclear. A synthesis of currently used surveys, relevant research and audit tools indicates seven core ways that families and carers might be engaged by health services. This study sought to confirm, from the perspective of family and carers, the importance of these seven health service engagement practices. In a mixed method online survey, 134 family members and carers were asked what they received and what they wanted from mental health services. Participants also quantified the importance of each of the seven core practices on a 0-100 point likert scale. Almost 250 verbatim responses were deductively matched against the seven themes, with additional unaligned responses inductively categorised. The findings triangulate with multiple diverse literatures to confirm seven fundamental engagement practices that carers and family want from health services. Conceptually, the seven practices are represented by two broad overarching practice themes of (i) meeting the needs of the family member and (ii) addressing the needs of the service user. Policy, clinical practice, training and future research might encompass the seven core practices along with consideration of the intertwined relationship of family, carers and the service user suggested by the two broader concepts. [Abstract copyright: © 2021. The Author(s).]
Original languageEnglish
Article number1073
Number of pages11
JournalBMC Health Services Research
Volume21
Issue number1
Early online date09 Oct 2021
DOIs
Publication statusEarly online date - 09 Oct 2021

Keywords

  • Humans
  • Caregivers
  • Engagement
  • Health services
  • Surveys and Questionnaires
  • Practices
  • Family
  • Carers
  • Mental Health Services

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