Accessible summary
What is known on the subject?
Patient and public involvement (PPI) is recognized as an increasingly important feature of healthcare research, education and public policy.
In mental health, PPI is increasingly seen as evidence of the further democratization of services, which started with de‐institutionalization in the 1960s and the recovery movement in the 1990s.
While much is known about learning enablers and learning gains on generic community‐based training programmes, less is known about PPI‐specific programmes in mental health.
What this paper adds to existing knowledge?
Participants at a national training programme to support the engagement of service users, their families and carers in mental health services identified training topics of greatest importance to them and reported on what they learnt and what helped their learning.
Patient and public involvement training initiatives aimed at supporting the engagement of service users, their families and carers should emphasize individual needs and local contexts.
Training programmes should not make artificial or actual distinctions between the programme participants who are health professionals and those who are non‐professionals, such as service users.
To our knowledge, this PPI initiative is the first time a national health service provider has sought to develop an engagement structure in mental health on a state‐wide basis.
What are the implications for practice?
Participants in training programmes designed to support patient and public involvement believe that such programmes should include understanding how conflict is resolved, how committees work effectively and how to develop interpersonal and facilitation skills.
Training programmes in mental health involving both professional and non‐professional participants requires all the participants to work together in particular at commissioning and design stages to achieve their desired outcome.
The evaluation of the training programme to support the roll‐out of this initiative offers lessons to others who may wish to pursue similar structures in other jurisdictions.
AbstractIntroductionThe Irish national mental health service provider commissioned a national training programme to support a patient and public involvement (PPI) initiative in mental health services. The programme evaluation afforded an opportunity to describe the learning gains and learning enablers and the factors that support PPI in mental health.AimWe aimed to evaluate a PPI training programme across nine regional administrative units in a national mental health service.MethodsWe conducted a participant exit survey, using the Student Assessment of Learning Gains (SALG) instrument. We analysed the survey responses using SPSS version 24 software and applied directed content analysis to the narrative comments provided in open‐ended questions.ResultsA total of 54 participants returned the completed questionnaire, yielding a response rate of 60%. The overall mean SALG score yielded was 3.97 (SD 0.66; range 1–5), in...