Abstract

Community-based participatory approaches are widely recognized as valuable methods for improving mental health and well-being by enabling a greater sense of liberty among participants, through the development of equitable policies and practices, which accommodate a range of diverse perspectives. One such approach, “Trialogue Meetings,” has been found to encourage disclosure and dialogue surrounding mental health, facilitate the growth and development of communities in relation to people’s experience of mental health difficulties, service provider and community response. Emerging in the 1990s because of perceived and felt inequitable relations between people with lived experience of mental health difficulties, family members of people with mental health difficulties and professionals providing mental health service provision. This approach has been shown to successfully reduce stigma and discrimination and improve relations between stakeholders in community and mental health care settings. Trialogue Meetings incorporate Open Dialogue methods to allow multiple stakeholder groups to participate in conversations around a given topic and enable the creation of a common language and mutual understanding. Trialogue Meetings have added benefits of allowing individuals to express themselves better, gain a sense of relationality and community with others and address predetermined power hierarchies with prescribed responses to people’s experiences. In this perspective, we present an outline for Trialogue Meetings as a medium for enhancing wellbeing, providing a transformative empowering process for deliberate discursive practice and engaging citizens through sustained collective dialogue.

Highlights

  • Community-based participatory approaches are widely recognized as valuable methods for improving mental health and well-being (Prilleltensky and Nelson, 2002; Kidd et al, 2014)

  • Trialogue Meetings provide such a participatory community approach. They draw upon Open Dialogue approaches (Bakhtin, 1981) that enable the creation of a common language and mutual understanding around given topics (For further details regarding this approach, see MacGabhann et al, 2012)

  • We describe our vision for Trialogue Meetings as a tool for engaging citizens in democratic and equitable discussions that foster wellbeing and conditions for mutual understanding surrounding particular topics of enquiry

Read more

Summary

INTRODUCTION

Community-based participatory approaches are widely recognized as valuable methods for improving mental health and well-being (Prilleltensky and Nelson, 2002; Kidd et al, 2014) They are typically designed to strengthen networks within organizations and communities (Heath, 2007) and have the potential for systemically excluded groups to address power imbalances and give voice to diverse perspectives (Kidd et al, 2014). They have been recognized for their potential to enable transformative dialogue in relation to contentious issues amongst people with mental health problems, family members/supporters of people with mental health problems and mental health professionals Due to these successes, Trialogue approaches have begun to be applied more widely to participatory research and community/organizational development. We describe our vision for Trialogue Meetings as a tool for engaging citizens in democratic and equitable discussions that foster wellbeing and conditions for mutual understanding surrounding particular topics of enquiry

BACKGROUND
DISCUSSION
CONCLUSION
DATA AVAILABILITY STATEMENT
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call