Downs James
Independent Researcher, Cardiff, Cardiff, UK
BMJ Ment Health. 2025 Sep 9;28(1):e301807. doi: 10.1136/bmjment-2025-301807.
Mental health research has long been structured around qualitative and quantitative methodologies, often marginalising experiential knowledge and reinforcing hierarchies of expertise. Although coproduction has gained traction as a participatory approach, its methodological status remains contested, leading to inconsistent practices and risks of tokenism.
This paper explores whether coproduction should be recognised not merely as a participatory ideal but as a third methodological pillar in mental health research, with distinct philosophical, ethical and practical foundations.
This paper critically integrates interdisciplinary sources from empirical research and theoretical literature to examine coproduction as a distinct methodological paradigm in mental health research. The analysis is informed by the author's reflexive engagement as a lived experience researcher.
Five inter-related challenges to meaningful coproduction are identified: persistent tokenism; the emotional labour required of lived experience contributors; power imbalances in decision-making and recognition; structural exclusions in participation and systemic barriers within academic governance and norms. In response, the paper proposes five strategies for integrating coproduction as a distinct methodological paradigm: creating sustainable fora for dialogue across difference; establishing coproduction as a core research competency; embedding a relational culture of care; fostering methodological innovation and evaluation; and challenging narrow definitions of academic value, authorship and output.
Reframing coproduction as a third methodological pillar offers a way to address the exclusion of knowledge derived from lived experience and can enhance the rigour, relevance and inclusivity of mental health science. This shift requires systemic changes in how research is conceptualised, taught, funded and evaluated.
Embedding coproduction as a core methodology can improve the relevance and responsiveness of research to clinical realities. Grounding research in lived experience offers insights that enhance service design, build trust and support more equitable, person-centred care, ultimately contributing to better clinical outcomes and more inclusive mental health systems.
长期以来,心理健康研究一直围绕定性和定量方法构建,常常将经验性知识边缘化,并强化专业等级制度。尽管共同生产作为一种参与式方法已获得关注,但其方法学地位仍存在争议,导致实践不一致以及形式主义的风险。
本文探讨共同生产是否不仅应被视为一种参与式理想,还应被视为心理健康研究中的第三个方法学支柱,具有独特的哲学、伦理和实践基础。
本文批判性地整合了来自实证研究和理论文献的跨学科资源,以审视共同生产作为心理健康研究中一种独特的方法学范式。该分析基于作者作为生活经验研究者的反思性参与。
确定了对有意义的共同生产的五个相互关联的挑战:持续的形式主义;生活经验贡献者所需的情感劳动;决策和认可中的权力不平衡;参与中的结构性排斥以及学术治理和规范中的系统性障碍。作为回应,本文提出了将共同生产整合为一种独特方法学范式的五项策略:创建跨越差异的可持续对话论坛;将共同生产确立为核心研究能力;培育关怀的关系文化;促进方法创新和评估;挑战对学术价值、作者身份和产出的狭隘定义。
将共同生产重新构建为第三个方法学支柱提供了一种解决排除源自生活经验的知识的方法,并可提高心理健康科学的严谨性、相关性和包容性。这一转变需要在研究的概念化、教学、资助和评估方式上进行系统性变革。
将共同生产作为核心方法加以应用可提高研究与临床现实的相关性和响应性。将研究建立在生活经验基础上可提供见解,从而改善服务设计、建立信任并支持更公平、以患者为中心的护理,最终有助于实现更好的临床结果和更具包容性的心理健康系统。