Abstract
Contemporary mental healthcare in the UK is based on an emerging service model that requires a number of ‘functional’ mental health teams to work together in providing comprehensive secondary mental healthcare to a catchment area. This model replaces the painfully won dominance of the single
Highlights
This report by Alison Faulkner is both timely and essential reading. It is intended for user/survivor researchers, those wishing to involve users in research and those wishing to commission research that follows good practice in user involvement
The roles of accountability and identity are critically discussed and the reader is left with a clearer picture of the meaning of user research as well as its ethical conduct
Contemporary mental healthcare in the UK is based on an emerging service model that requires a number of ‘functional’ mental health teams to work together in providing comprehensive secondary mental healthcare to a catchment area
Summary
It is intended for user/survivor researchers, those wishing to involve users in research and those wishing to commission research that follows good practice in user involvement. Research: Guidelines for the Ethical Conduct of Research Carried Out by Mental Service Users and Survivors User involvement in and control of research has increased dramatically from the early days of user-focused monitoring (Rose, 2001) and strategies for living (Faulkner & Layzell, 2000). Each chapter provides succinct information on the topic under consideration.
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