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Can a carer (peer) led psychoeducation programme improve mental health carers well-being, reduce burden and enrich empowerment: a service evaluation study

Chiocchi, John; Lamph, Gary; Slevin, Paula; Fisher-Smith, Debra; Sampson, Mark

Authors

John Chiocchi

Paula Slevin

Debra Fisher-Smith

Mark Sampson



Contributors

J. Chiocchi
Other

G. Lamph
Other

P. Slevin
Other

D. Fisher-Smith
Other

M. Sampson
Other

Abstract

Purpose
Carers of people with mental health problems present with high levels of burden, poor mental well-being and feelings of disempowerment by mental health services. The purpose of this paper is to establish whether providing a psychoeducation skill programme for carers would lead to an improvement of mental well-being, reduce the levels of burden that carers sometimes feel while caring for someone with mental illness and also to increase empowerment. This paper provides a service evaluation study of an innovative carer-led psychoeducational intervention that was undertaken.

Design/methodology/approach
This programme was initiated and led by a carer who had experienced a lack of service provision to support carers and families in understanding and caring for a relative with severe and enduring mental health diagnoses. A model of co-production was adopted with the carer who led this initiative working closely with an occupational therapist and consultant psychologist in its development and delivery. Data were collected to measure the impact of the training at five different time points. The measures employed to measure outcomes were the Warwick-Edinburgh Mental Well-being Scale, the Burden Assessment Scale and Family Empowerment Scale.

Findings
Results indicated improved well-being, reduced burden and increased family empowerment in carers who completed this peer-led carer initiative psychoeducational programme.

Research limitations/implications
This service evaluation study was conducted in a single site and in the site in which it was developed. The carer consultant who led this evaluation and development of the intervention was also the peer worker who delivered the interventions. Hence, the authors are unable to ascertain if the results reported are unique to the individual peer worker. The transferability of this programme and generalisability of the result should therefore be treated with caution and further replication of this model and research is required. This would be beneficial to be conducted in an alternative site from where it was developed, delivered by different facilitators and include a control group.

Practical implications
The evidence from this study indicates that carers are able and willing to attend a group psychoeducational programme. A high number of referrals to the programme in a relatively short timeframe indicates that there is significant demand for such a service. The implementation of the programme is relatively straightforward. The key challenges for practical implementation are to have the right carer to lead and deliver the programme and the right support system in place for them (financial and supervision). Co-production also is not without challenges, the peer worker and occupational staff need to ensure that mutually valued and respected working relationship should develop.

Originality/value
This is the first evaluation of the impact of a carer-led psychoeducation intervention for carers of people with mental health difficulties in secondary mental health services.

Citation

Chiocchi, J., Lamph, G., Slevin, P., Fisher-Smith, D., & Sampson, M. (2019). Can a carer (peer) led psychoeducation programme improve mental health carers well-being, reduce burden and enrich empowerment: a service evaluation study. Journal of Mental Health Training, Education and Practice, 14(2), 131-140. https://doi.org/10.1108/JMHTEP-10-2018-0057

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Jan 18, 2019
Online Publication Date Mar 15, 2019
Publication Date Mar 20, 2019
Deposit Date Mar 1, 2024
Journal Journal of Mental Health Training, Education and Practice
Print ISSN 1755-6228
Publisher Emerald
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 14
Issue 2
Pages 131-140
DOI https://doi.org/10.1108/JMHTEP-10-2018-0057