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Collaboration as a process and an outcome: Consumer experiences of collaborating with nurses in care planning in an acute inpatient mental health unit

This qualitative study explores inpatient mental health consumer perceptions of how collaborative care planning with mental health nurses impacts personal recovery. Semi‐structured interviews were conducted with consumers close to discharge from one unit in Sydney, Australia. The unit had been under...

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Published in:International journal of mental health nursing 2018-08, Vol.27 (4), p.1204-1211
Main Authors: Reid, Rebecca, Escott, Phil, Isobel, Sophie
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Language:English
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container_title International journal of mental health nursing
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creator Reid, Rebecca
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Isobel, Sophie
description This qualitative study explores inpatient mental health consumer perceptions of how collaborative care planning with mental health nurses impacts personal recovery. Semi‐structured interviews were conducted with consumers close to discharge from one unit in Sydney, Australia. The unit had been undertaking a collaborative care planning project which encouraged nurses to use care plan documentation to promote person‐centred and goal‐focussed interactions and the development of meaningful strategies to aid consumer recovery. The interviews explored consumer understandings of the collaborative care planning process, perceptions of the utility of the care plan document and the process of collaborating with the nurses, and their perception of the impact of collaboration on their recovery. Findings are presented under four organizing themes: the process of collaborating, the purpose of collaborating, the nurse as collaborator and the role of collaboration in wider care and recovery. Consumers highlighted the importance of the process of developing their care plan with a nurse as being as helpful for recovery as the goals and strategies themselves. The findings provide insights into consumers’ experiences of care planning in an acute inpatient unit, the components of care that support recovery and highlight specific areas for mental health nursing practice improvement in collaboration.
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source Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); Wiley-Blackwell Read & Publish Collection; Sociological Abstracts
subjects care plan
Care plans
Collaboration
consumer experience
Consumers
Health planning
Inpatient care
Integrated care
Mental health
Mental health care
Mental health services
Nurses
Nursing
Patient-centered care
Perceptions
Planning
Professional practice
Psychiatric nurses
Psychiatric-mental health nursing
Qualitative research
Recovery
Recovery (Medical)
title Collaboration as a process and an outcome: Consumer experiences of collaborating with nurses in care planning in an acute inpatient mental health unit
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