Recovery Colleges After a Decade of Research: A Literature Review
Abstract
Objective:
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Methods
Results
Included Publications
Study | Country | Sample | Goal and methods | Main results |
---|---|---|---|---|
Quantitative studies | ||||
Anfossi, 2017 (11)b | England | N=39 | Goal: To explore the current state of RCs in the UK. Methods: Survey. | Outcomes evaluation: The majority of RCs collect outcome data (92%). Support and collaboration: The majority of participants stated that their college follows the defining features investigated (coproduction, educational, inclusive, reflects recovery). |
Bourne et al., 2018 (17) | England | N=463 | Goal: To evaluate service use outcomes for Sussex RC students who use mental health services. Methods: Controlled-before-and-after design with archival data. | Completed group (attended>70% of RC course): Significant reduction in occupied bed days, admission, community contacts over 18 months; significantly greater reduction in the number of admissions than noncompleted group (attended<70% of RC course) over 18 months. Noncashable cost savings estimated to be £1,200 per year per registered student who uses secondary mental health services (net savings of 22%). |
Chung et al., 2016 (18) | Canada | N/A | Goal: To describe a recovery education center, the Supporting Transitions and Recovery Learning Centre. Methods: Descriptive statistics. | After attending one course, 60% of students attend the subsequent months, while 39.7% of students engaged in continuing education in the community. Students’ positive feedback: More solid social network, a more valued life, and social, educational, and vocational skills. |
Dunn et al., 2016 (19) | England | N=16 | Goal: To explore the barriers to attendance of RCs and possible improvements. Methods: Survey. | Personal factors: Physical illness (69%), other commitments or life events (50%), worrying about other students (44%), being anxious (38%), not knowing what to expect (25%). Practical factors: Distance (60%), cost of travel (38%), inconvenient time of day for class (25%), communications issues (25%), etc. Students found individual learning plans to be helpful and to improve attendance. |
Kay and Edgley, 2019 (20) | England | N=3 | Goal: To evaluate cost efficiencies and health outcomes after 1 year of course delivery in an RC. Methods: Service evaluation and case study data evaluation (N=3). | Significant impact on health outcomes (WEMWBS, PAM); improved employment opportunities for students (not specified if significant); 57% (N=176) of students were service users of secondary care; two-thirds showed reduction of contacts with care services, suggesting potential cost savings between £1,000 and £2,000 per person per year ($1,200 to $2,500 USD). |
King and Meddings, 2019 (12)b | England | N=25 | Goal: To provide a preliminary outline of the international presence, commonality, and differences between RCs. Methods: E-mail survey. | RCs in 22 countries in five continents; participants rated stigma in their country as high and rated use of recovery approaches as low; top common reasons for developing an RC were to transform the organization and change attitudes and culture (N=10), to serve the needs of the community (N=8), and to act on inspiration from visiting other RCs (N=3). Common themes identified were recovery, coproduction, education and learning, inclusivity, sustainability, and culture change. |
Meddings et al., 2015 (4) | England | N=35 | Goal: To evaluate two pilot RCs. Methods: Pre-post design. | High level of student satisfaction: 97% reported that they would recommend the course they had completed. Significant progress on recovery goals: Most commonly gained confidence, increased knowledge and/or skills, and met other people. Large (statistically significant) gains on PQR, CHOICE, WEMWBS, MANSA. Significant increase in number of friends with whom students can talk about mental health. |
Meddings et al., 2019 (21) | England | N=2,296 | Goal: To explore whether one RC reflects its community. Methods: Audit analysis and descriptive statistics. | RC students were representative of the local community in terms of membership in protected groups often underserved by mental health services, such as LGBT and BAME, but fewer students were elderly (≥60 years) or men. |
Nurser et al., 2017 (22) | England | N=58 | Goal: To measure whether RC courses address self-stigma. Methods: Repeated (within-subjects measure) pre-post design. | QPR (statistically significant) increased following course attendance (mean±SD=35.78±10.97 before attendance vs. 43.09±8.48 after), indicating that students felt more progress toward recovery after attending. ISMI-10 decreased from 2.34±0.53 to 2.12±0.56, indicating students felt less self-stigma following attendance. |
Sommer et al., 2019 (23)b | Australia | N=64 | Goal: To examine the type of goals that RC participants set. Methods: Correlational quantitative analyses. | Most common goals: Education, socialization, general medical health, mental health, and employment; 73% of goals were fully or partially achieved. Students with higher attendance and who attended more courses were more likely to achieve their goals at least partially. Employment goals were significantly less likely to be achieved than other goals (perceived as more difficult to achieve than other goals). Education-related goals had the highest probability of being achieved, followed by mental health, social, and general medical health goals. |
Mixed-methods studies | ||||
Burhouse et al., 2015 (24) | England | N=50 | Goal: To test if RCs offer hope, knowledge, and practical skills in self-management and support recovery. Methods: Mixed design with pre-post course evaluation questionnaires and focus group. | Quantitative results (statistical significance not reported): 94% of students reported feeling more hope after attending classes; 91% of students reported having increased their knowledge and better knowledge of themselves; many improved their self-management skills (self-confidence, self-control, daily routines, and understanding of others); 100% of students progressed toward their recovery goals. Qualitative results: Individual transformations (sense of belonging, ability to contemplate the future, feeling safe at the RC). |
Ebrahim et al., 2018 (25) | England | N=56–89 | Goal: To evaluate the impact of engagement with an RC on student well-being. Methods: Mixed design with pre-post feedback questionnaires. | WEMWBS: statistically significant difference/improvement between pre-post terms. Empower Flower: statistically significant difference/improvement between pre-post terms. Student feedback: 90% of students had more confidence in their abilities afterward as well as increased motivation; 84% of students felt more confident around people; 94% reported they would be “extremely likely” or “likely” to recommend the RC to friends and family. Themes in students’ comments: quality of recovery-supporting care (unique contribution, fight stigma, and safe place), achievement of individual recovery goals (learning, social support, and social skill); subjective measures of personal recovery (feeling more hopeful about the future), achievement of socially valued goals (work/volunteering and recovery), quality of life and well-being (sense of purpose and confidence, encouragement to leave the house and to feel a part of something), measurement of service use (reduction in use of services, fewer visits to general practitioner, less use of mental health services). |
Hall et al., 2018 (26) | Australia | N=51 | Goal: To study the implementation process and measure intermediate outcomes for people who engaged with an Australian RC. Methods: Coproduced mixed-methods design (implementation study). | Satisfaction highest for “staff respect of students” and “safety and comfort of the service.” Environment oriented toward promoting learning and growth and being inspiring and encouraging; staff were caring and compassionate. Interviews: Students reported a positive impact on education and learning, providing them with access to knowledge; encouraging them to adopt and maintain a healthy lifestyle; employment. Attending the RC gave students the opportunity to participate as peer facilitators. |
Hopkins et al., 2018 (27) | Australia | N=46 | Goal: To understand why young people and adults enrolled in a coproduced, co-received RC. Methods: Mixed design, quantitative and qualitative pre-post survey. | Young people: 50% (N=19) participated in the course to improve their knowledge of the course content; 32% (N=12) hoped to increase their personal self-knowledge and understanding; 10% (N=4) hoped to gain new perspectives on the course subject matter. Adults: A majority (47%) enrolled to improve their knowledge of the course content; 17% (N=5) hoped to increase personal self-knowledge; 13% (N=4) hoped to gain new perspectives; 10% (N=3) enrolled in a course with the hope of improving their understanding of how the RC works. Factors that could help them get the most out of the course: Among young people, speaking up (18%, N=7); flexible learning environment (8%, N=3); safe, respectful, and supportive environment (21%, N=8); engaging course content (16%, N=6). Among adults, speaking up (30%, N=9); safe, respectful, and supportive environment (20%, N=6), engaging course content (7%, N=2). |
Lucchi et al., 2018 (28) | Italy | N=42 staff;N=34 service users | Goal: To describe the process of planning, implementing, and evaluating the first RC in Italy Methods: Mixed-methods design (implementation study). | Staff (tutors) considered the educational process to be of very good quality; project completely met their expectations (50%). Their involvement changed the way they worked with service users. Service users reported an enjoyable and valuable experience; 65% rated their learning process as very good; 35% rated it good; 70% found it useful for improving their quality of life and personal aspirations. Focus group reported that students acquired new competencies through the courses and were able to make new social connections; approach to coproduction was found to be very good and was described as challenging, useful, and satisfying; staff members recognized the RC model as a valuable tool to enable services to support individual recovery journeys. |
Meddings et al., 2014 (29) | England | N=40 | Goal: To explore students’ perspective on what they consider makes the RC effective. Methods: Mixed design, course feedback, and qualitative interviews. | Feedback forms: 96% of students said that the course was good or excellent; 97% of students said they would recommend it to friends, family, or colleagues. Students reported improved self-esteem, more confidence, and a sense of achievement. The following categories describe what made the RC helpful: learning with others, coproduction and value of lived experience, safe supportive environment, learning new knowledge, social opportunity, structure of the day, and choice. |
Perkins et al., 2017 (30) | England | N=94 | Goal: To explore the impact of attending the RC on health service providers. Methods: Online survey with descriptive statistic and thematic analysis. | Themes were identified for change in attitudes toward mental health and recovery: new meanings of recovery, challenging traditional views on recovery, hope for recovery, increased parity (the RC positively influenced the way students supported others and increased understanding and empathy), challenging nonrecovery practices, and adopting recovery practices. Other themes included impact on personal well-being, connectedness, safe place, self-care, and a sense of competency and high morale at work. |
Stevens et al., 2018 (31) | England | N=17–28 | Goal: To evaluate arts activities on the well-being of students. Methods: Mixed design, pre-post course questionnaires. | Statistically significant increases in mental well-being and range of arts activities following course attendance. Themes for students included that courses improved service users’ mental well-being and promoted artistic growth; students learned skills and engaged in positive risk-taking; the positivity of social aspects of courses was important for many service users. Themes for peer tutors included increased confidence and self-esteem; appreciation for support and supervision. At follow-up, 17 of 24 students reported improved mental well-being, increased social inclusion, and continued use of skills learned in the course to maintain well-being. |
Study | Country | Sample | Goal and methods | Main results |
---|---|---|---|---|
Quantitative studies | ||||
Cameron et al., 2018 (32) | England | N=13 | Goal: To understand how RC students and tutors experience the design and delivery of a mental health course. Methods: Qualitative case study. Analysis: Qualitative thematic. | Important themes: Effective collaboration between tutors is a key aspect. The use of lived experience expertise was not confined to that shared by peer trainers. The valuing of lived experience on par with practitioner and academic experience meant that the practitioners and academics felt it legitimate to draw on relevant aspects of their own lived experience. The environment and methods of learning had a significant impact and should be considered alongside content. Boundaries that arise between people regarding areas of knowledge and experience can be viewed as sources of creativity that can enrich courses. |
Crowther et al., 2018 (15) | England | N=33- member advisory panel | Goal: To develop a stratified theory identifying candidate mechanisms of action and outcomes (impact) for RCs at the staff, services, and societal levels. Methods: Unspecified. Analysis: Inductive thematic. | At the staff level, experiencing new relationships may change attitudes and professional practice. Identified outcomes: Experiencing and valuing coproduction; changed perceptions of service users; and increased passion and job motivation. At the services level, RCs sometimes develop separately from their host system, reducing the impact of the college on the organization but allowing the development of an alternative culture. At the societal level, partnering with community-based agencies gave the public opportunities for learning alongside people with mental health problems and enabled community agencies to work with people they might not have otherwise. RCs also provided opportunities to beneficially influence community attitudes, thus reducing negative assumptions about people with mental health challenges. |
Dalgarno and Oates, 2018 (33) | England | N=8 | Goal: To explore the meaning of coproduction for clinicians in an RC. Methods: Exploratory case study. Analysis: Qualitative thematic. | The “meaning of coproduction” had four themes: definitions, power dynamics, negotiating roles, and influence on practice. Reassessment of the clinician’s expert role and power changed their practice, the language they used, and the personal information they shared. The mechanisms by which coproduction may transform professional practice included being in an educational rather than a clinical context, the experience of being supported, the challenge of negotiating multiple roles, and experiencing a gradual shift of role emphasis as cotrainer relationships developed. Being a practitioner trainer could be a professionally transformative experience. |
Frayn et al., 2016 (34) | England | N=8 | Goal: To describe the development process of an RC approach in a forensic psychiatry environment. Methods: Unspecified. Analysis: Unspecified. | Two themes emerged: The objective of the RC to support a shift in emphasis from treatment to education; staff felt they related to students in a more constructive way. The value of cofacilitation shared by all; students were inspired by meeting people who got back to the community. Experiential knowledge is considered facilitating. |
Gill, 2014 (35)b | Australia | N=6 | Goal: To explore the value of coproduction in the context of the recently established South-Eastern Sydney Recovery College. Methods: Unspecified. Analysis: Unspecified. | Peer educators: Value of coproduction included benefits self-esteem, personal and professional growth, hope and meaning, improved network, skills; codelivery challenging but positive, felt valued and respected. Clinicians: Reported better understanding of service users, new knowledge acquired, challenging move away from traditional power dynamic, support and training required to get the most out the coproduction paradigm. RC team: rapid growth was a challenge; underestimated the support and training required. |
Harper and McKeown, 2018 (36) | England | N=4 | Goal: To explore students’ motivations for enrollment and attendance with RCs. Methods: Unspecified. Analysis: Thematic. | The following themes emerged: Making the effort: attendance sometimes required great effort because participants had little energy left but were motivated to learn and socialize; they forced themselves to attend for the good it will do and because it is part of their recovery. Being “too unwell”: illustrates the struggle of learning in the presence of mental health difficulties; participants reported to continue attending even if they felt too unwell because they believed RC could work. Friendly environment: appreciation of the tutors had positive effects on participants’ experience and learning; they found the group dynamic positive; participants expressed that RC temporarily reduced their symptoms. |
Martina, 2015 (37) | England | Goal: To collect information and students’ comments on the course “Poetry for Recovery.” Methods: Unspecified. Analysis: Unspecified. | Students appreciated the dynamic between tutors, found them friendly, encouraging, and supportive. Students reported enjoying hearing each other’s stories and found the course was a good bonding opportunity. The course helped them deal better with mental illness. Writing helped them manage moods and feelings during recovery. They said the course gave them a confidence boost. | |
Newman-Taylor et al., 2016 (38) | England | N=11 | Goal: To assess the impact of the RC in the context of pilot study. Methods: Unspecified. Analysis: Thematic. | Overall theme of connecting with others differently emerged as well as three subthemes: reflection on “stuckness,” quality of relationships to enable change, and widening horizons. The change of paradigm elicited by coproduction was recognized as enabling students to engage with each other. Students reflected on their experiences and were more hopeful. Contact with others motivated change and facilitated understanding of new perspectives. The broadening of horizons was associated with moving on and growing in confidence after attending the RC. |
Nurser et al., 2018 (39) | England | N=8 | Goal: To examine individual experiences of a personal storytelling course in an RC. Methods: Phenomenology. Analysis: Interpretative phenomenological. | Five key themes: highly emotional experience, feeling safe to disclose, renewed sense of self, two-way process, and novel opportunity. Individuals gained a renewed sense of identity from connecting with their emotions and experiences through telling their story. Feeling safe facilitated richer disclosure by participants. |
Sommer et al., 2018 (40) | Australia | N=29 | Goal: To explore the experiences of students who attended the South-Eastern Sydney Recovery College. Methods: Exploratory, descriptive qualitative design. Analysis: Thematic. | Four themes emerged from the thematic analysis: Connection with others: Validation that they received, the sense of connection. Hope for the future: Reinforced by a sense of connection with others; RCs gave skills and confidence to manage recovery and move beyond mental illness; opened pathways to education and employment. The importance of lived experience: Tutors highlighted the importance of involving people with lived experience with mental health concerns in the processes of cofacilitation and co-learning; the inclusion of both of people with lived experience and clinical staff as students sitting side by side was valued. Changing attitudes and systems: Renewed and deepened understanding of the meaning of recovery; staff described how this new insight into recovery was having an impact on their clinical practice; incorporating a recovery philosophy into practice required changes to current systems through shifting the orientation. |
Toney et al., 2018 (16) | England | N=33 | Goal: To coproduce a change model characterizing mechanisms of action and outcomes of RCs. Methods: Unspecified. Analysis: Deductive. | Four mechanisms of action for RCs: empowering environment (safety, respect, and supporting choices), enabling different relationships (power, peers, and working together), facilitating personal growth (e.g., coproduced learning, strengths, and celebrating success), and shifting the balance of power through coproduction and reducing power differentials. Outcomes: Change in the student (e.g., increases in self-understanding and self-confidence) and changes in the student’s life (for example, occupational, social, and service use). |
Windsor et al., 2017 (14) | England | N=10 | Goal: To critically appraise the existing evidence of recovery educational programs in mental health. Methods: Unspecified. Analysis: Thematic. | Coproduction and education and recovery programs led to a reduction in the use of health services, increased opportunities for future employment, and a positive impact on staff. The college brought safety, empowerment, and stimulation; other important themes included increased confidence, motivation, and social interaction. Positive qualities of RCs included a safe and supportive environment, social opportunity, a chance to learn from other students, the chance to meet people who had similar experiences, and learning from a mixed group. Focus group: Many different outcomes (benefits) were reported, including improved general well-being, confidence, motivation, and social interactions. It is notable that there was a clear lack of negative comments. |
Zabel et al., 2016 (41) | England | N=21 | Goal: To explore the subjective experience of people involved in RCs. Methods: Unspecified. Analysis: Thematic. | Four main themes: Ethos of the RC, personal and organizational impact, value of coproduction, and barriers to engagement. Participants appreciated the inclusive nature of the RC and felt supported by tutors. Hope is a theme that was appreciated for its positive impact on students. Participants reported that the RC environment was supportive, nonjudgmental, safe, and even destigmatizing. They developed several self-management skills that they felt they were able to transfer to different situations. The RC helped them get out of the house and to complete their routine. Participants also felt that RCs could improve services, change practice by sharing information among colleagues, and lead to savings by reducing hospitalizations. Coproduction was an RC principle that participants valued and appreciated. |
The RC Model’s International Presence
Positive Impacts of RCs
Students’ satisfaction and appreciation.
Goal attainment.
Change in service use.
Change in service providers’ practice.
Barriers and facilitators to attending an RC.
Methodologies Used to Evaluate RCs
Qualitative designs.
Quantitative designs.
Mixed-methods designs.
Discussion
Future Directions
Limitations and Strengths
Conclusions
Acknowledgments
Supplementary Material
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