Power to the people? A co-produced critical review of service user involvement in mental health professions education

被引:0
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作者
Csilla Kalocsai
Sacha Agrawal
Lee de Bie
Michaela Beder
Gail Bellissimo
Suze Berkhout
Andrew Johnson
Nancy McNaughton
Terri Rodak
Kim McCullough
Sophie Soklaridis
机构
[1] Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre,Department of Psychiatry, Temerty Faculty of Medicine
[2] University of Toronto,Centre for Clinical Ethics
[3] Centre for Addiction and Mental Health,Department of Family and Community Medicine, Temerty Faculty of Medicine
[4] Unity Health Toronto,Department of Psychiatry, Temerty Faculty of Medicine
[5] University of Toronto,Department of Social Work
[6] Unity Health Toronto,undefined
[7] Independent service user educator researcher,undefined
[8] University Health Network,undefined
[9] University of Toronto,undefined
[10] Wilson Centre for Research in Education at University Health Network and University of Toronto,undefined
[11] Michener Institute of Education at University Health Network,undefined
[12] Wilfrid Laurier University,undefined
来源
关键词
Service user involvement; Patient and public involvement; Co-production; Health professional education; Health professions education research; Mental health; Critical literature review; Critical theories;
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摘要
Meaningful service user involvement in health professions education requires integrating knowledge held by “lay” people affected by health challenges into professional theories and practices. Involving service users redefines whose knowledge “counts” and implies a shift in power. Such a shift is especially significant in the mental health field, where power imbalances between health professionals and service users are magnified. However, reviews of the literature on service user involvement in mental health professional education do little to explore how power manifests in this work. Meanwhile critical and Mad studies scholars have highlighted that without real shifts in power, inclusion practices can lead to harmful consequences. We conducted a critical review to explore how power is addressed in the literature that describes service user involvement in mental health professions education. Our team used a co-produced approach and critical theories to identify how power implicitly and explicitly operates in this work to unearth the inequities and power structures that service user involvement may inadvertently perpetuate. We demonstrate that power permeates service user involvement in mental health professional education but is rarely made visible. We also argue that by missing the opportunity to locate power, the literature contributes to a series of epistemic injustices that reveal the contours of legitimate knowledge in mental health professions education and its neoliberal underpinnings. Ultimately, we call for a critical turn that foregrounds power relations to unlock the social justice-oriented transformative potential of service user involvement in mental health professions education and health professions education more broadly.
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页码:273 / 300
页数:27
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