>Co-production is essentially where professionals and citizens share power to plan and deliver support services together, recognising that both partners have a vital contribution to make. One example of a co-produced approach we reviewed is the Service User Network in Croydon. The network has been designed jointly by psychiatrists and service users who work together on an ongoing basis to deliver it. The network combines professional and lived experience and creates active networks that support people’s recovery.
You're right that it's a bit scary, and that care needs to be taken around clinical governance and data governance.
There's peer to peer to support within a clinical model and peer to peer to support absent one. The cartoons in the article illustrate the breadth of possibility within the latter.
There are two "Tackling stigma" campaigns you might be interested in. One is "Time to Change" from England. They have a range of great materials. (I've had some minor involvement with a Time to Change project): http://www.time-to-change.org.uk/
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[ 2.7 ms ] story [ 25.1 ms ] threadI've published this post which goes into more detail on my vision for this and the first product
I'd absolutely love any feedback from you guys either in the comments or by e-mail
Thanks :D
Here's a nice introduction to co-production: http://www.mind.org.uk/information-support/your-stories/co-p...
>Co-production is essentially where professionals and citizens share power to plan and deliver support services together, recognising that both partners have a vital contribution to make. One example of a co-produced approach we reviewed is the Service User Network in Croydon. The network has been designed jointly by psychiatrists and service users who work together on an ongoing basis to deliver it. The network combines professional and lived experience and creates active networks that support people’s recovery.
You're right that it's a bit scary, and that care needs to be taken around clinical governance and data governance.
Here's a video from the Health foundation about it.
http://www.health.org.uk/recovery-college
There are two "Tackling stigma" campaigns you might be interested in. One is "Time to Change" from England. They have a range of great materials. (I've had some minor involvement with a Time to Change project): http://www.time-to-change.org.uk/
The other is the Australian "Soften the Fuck Up": http://softenthefckup.spurprojects.org/
Good luck! I'd be really interested to hear about the results.