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Volume 3

Psychology 2019

July 31-August 01, 2019

Journal of Clinical Psychology and Cognitive Science

July 31-August 01, 2019 | Amsterdam, Netherlands

PSYCHOLOGY AND BEHAVIORAL SCIENCE

22

nd

World Congress on

Clin Psychol Cog Sci, Volume 3

Towards a recovery orientated mental health service: Findings from a national

consultation with mental health service users in Ireland

Pádraig Ó Féich

Mental Health Reform, Ireland

Background

: In 2006, in a policy document entitledAVision for Change, Ireland undertook to move towards a modern, recovery

orientated public mental health service characterised by holistic care, individualised care planning, the provision of accessible

support, increased involvement of service users in decisions about their treatment and care and greater continuity of care across

the mental health services. More than a decade on, it remained unclear to what extent Irish mental health services had progressed

towards the modern, recovery orientated system outlined in AVision for Change.

Aim

: Mental Health Reform's My Voice Matters project aimed to address this by examining the views and experiences of mental

health service users and the evidence for progress towards a recovery orientated public mental health service in Ireland. This

project was the first large-scale national consultation in many years to provide detailed and up-to-date service user feedback.

Method

: 1,188 participants who had accessed mental health services in Ireland in the last two years completed an in-depth online

survey. The analysis was mainly descriptive in nature. However, an ordinal logistic regression was carried out to examine key

factors associated with service user's overall experience of/satisfaction with the mental health service in Ireland.

Findings

: Findings were mixed at best with a minority of participants experiencing services consistent with a recovery orientated

approach as outlined in A Vision for Change. On average overall satisfaction was low with 42 percent of participants reporting

a poor overall experience in the last two years. However, findings from the ordinal logistic regression indicated some ways

in which service user experiences may be improved, which are consistent with modern, recovery orientated mental health

care. Alongside age, the provision of individualised care plans, accessible support in the form of a key worker, service user

involvement in decisions about their treatment and care, and continuity of care were found to be significant predictors of service

user satisfaction. Calculated odds ratios showed, for example, that service users who reported having a written recovery/care plan

and those who reported being involved in decisions about the medications they take were 2.2 and 2.5 times more likely to report

a good overall experience, respectively.

Conclusion

: More work is needed if Ireland is to achieve the modern, recovery orientated system envisaged in A Vision for

Change more than a decade ago. However, key pillars of the recovery orientated approach, such as individualised care planning

and increased service user involvement, have the potential to improve service user's experiences going forward.

Biography

Pádraig Ó Féich is currently a research officer with Mental Health Reform, Ireland's leading national coalition on Mental Health. An

experienced mixed-methods researcher and former University College Dublin Scholar, he was awarded a PhD by the School of

Psychology in UCD in 2016. After that, he completed a post-doctoral project working with University College Dublin and the Childhood

Development Initiative on a housing policy paper. He has a history of research in the charity and community sectors, is currently a

volunteer director of an inner-city community organization in Dublin, and has a strong interest in advocacy-based research.

pofeich@mentalhealthreform.ie