Harris Holly, Donner Kayle, Rovet Jordana, Rosell Elizabeth, Wolframe Jacob, Lee Taryn, Bellissimo Gail, Johnson Andrew, Soklaridis Sophie, Islam Faisal
Department of Education, Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, 1025 Queen St. West, Toronto, ON, M6J 1H1, Canada.
Provincial System Support Program, Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, 33 Russell Street, Toronto, M5S 2S1, Canada.
Res Involv Engagem. 2024 Dec 18;10(1):132. doi: 10.1186/s40900-024-00666-z.
Recovery Colleges are mental health-oriented education programs that are rooted in principles of peer support and co-production. Co-production, in this context, involves people with lived experience of mental health and addiction challenges and people with other forms of expertise (e.g., mental health professionals, administrators, and researchers) collaborating on the design and actualization of programs and initiatives. Despite co-production being a central feature of Recovery Colleges, very few Recovery College evaluations appear to be co-produced. In addition, there is a lack of research that evaluates the quality of the co-production processes in developing evaluations. The Recovery College at the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, called the Collaborative Learning College, established an Evaluation Subcommittee with the goal of co-designing and implementing an evaluation plan for the program. In response to the dearth of literature on co-producing Recovery College evaluations and the quality of such collaborative processes, the Evaluation Subcommittee conducted a principles-focused evaluation to assess the quality of their process of co-producing an evaluation plan.
All members of the Evaluation Subcommittee collaboratively developed and agreed on three principles that they felt were most important in their co-production process. Using a self-narrative approach, each member then produced a reflection on the importance of the principles, the degree to which the committee adhered to them, and the impact. Finally, members engaged in collaborative thematic analysis and co-wrote this manuscript.
The results of this study outline member's purposes for joining the Evaluation Subcommittee, the strengths and challenges related to embodying the collaborative principles, and the associated impacts.
The findings demonstrate the value of co-producing health education evaluations with people with lived experience and highlight important lessons learned through the Evaluation Subcommittee's collaborative process, specifically related to mitigating the impacts of power imbalances. These lessons can be valuable for others to consider in their co-production processes.
康复学院是以心理健康为导向的教育项目,其植根于同伴支持和共同生产的原则。在这种背景下,共同生产涉及有心理健康和成瘾挑战生活经历的人以及其他形式的专业人士(如心理健康专业人员、管理人员和研究人员),他们共同参与项目和倡议的设计与实施。尽管共同生产是康复学院的核心特征,但似乎很少有康复学院评估是共同生产的。此外,缺乏评估评估开发过程中共同生产质量的研究。成瘾与心理健康中心的康复学院,即协作学习学院,成立了一个评估小组委员会,目标是共同设计并实施该项目的评估计划。鉴于关于康复学院评估共同生产及此类协作过程质量的文献匮乏,评估小组委员会进行了一项以原则为重点的评估,以评估其共同制定评估计划过程的质量。
评估小组委员会的所有成员共同制定并商定了他们认为在共同生产过程中最重要的三项原则。然后,每位成员采用自我叙述的方法,对这些原则的重要性、委员会遵守这些原则的程度以及影响进行反思。最后,成员们进行协作主题分析并共同撰写了本手稿。
本研究结果概述了成员加入评估小组委员会的目的、体现协作原则相关的优势和挑战以及相关影响。
研究结果证明了与有生活经历的人共同进行健康教育评估的价值,并突出了通过评估小组委员会的协作过程学到的重要经验教训,特别是与减轻权力不平衡的影响相关的经验教训。这些经验教训对其他人在其共同生产过程中具有参考价值。