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Using a digital personal recovery resource in routine mental health practice: feasibility, acceptability and outcomes

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posted on 2024-08-06, 12:12 authored by John Farhall, David Castle, Emma Constantine, Fiona Foley, Michael Kyrios, Susan RossellSusan Rossell, Chelsea Arnold, Nuwan Leitan, Kristi-Ann Villagonzalo, Lisa Brophy, Ellie Fossey, Denny MeyerDenny Meyer, Cathrine Mihalopoulos, Greg MurrayGreg Murray, Cassy Nunan, Leon SterlingLeon Sterling, Neil ThomasNeil Thomas
Background: Digital technologies enable the dissemination of multimedia resources to support adults with serious mental illness in their self-management and personal recovery. However, delivery needs to accommodate engagement and accessibility challenges. Aims: We examined how a digital resource, designed for mental health workers and consumers to use together in session, would be used in routine practice. Methods: Thirty consumers and their workers participated. The web-based resource, Self-Management And Recovery Technology (SMART), was available to use within and between sessions, for a 6-month period. Workers initiated in-session use where relevant. Feasibility was explored via uptake and usage data; and acceptability and impact via questionnaires. A pre-post design assessed recovery outcomes for consumers and relationship outcomes for consumers and workers. Results: In participating mental health practitioner-consumer dyads, consumers gave strong acceptability ratings, and reported improved working relationships. However, the resource was typically used in one-third or fewer appointments, with consumers expressing a desire for greater in-session use. Improvements in self-rated personal recovery were not observed, possibly contributed to by low usage. Conclusions: In-session use was found helpful by consumers but may be constrained by other demands in mental health care delivery: collaborative use may require dedicated staff time or more formal implementation.

Funding

Government of Victoria

History

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PDF (Accepted manuscript)

ISSN

0963-8237

Journal title

Journal of Mental Health

Volume

32

Issue

3

Pagination

7 pp

Publisher

Informa UK Limited

Copyright statement

Copyright © 2022 the authors. This is the final peer-reviewed accepted manuscript version, hosted under the terms and conditions of the Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International (CC BY-NC 4.0) license. See http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/

Language

eng

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