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Featured researches published by Katherine Owen.


BMC Health Services Research | 2013

Introducing peer worker roles into UK mental health service teams: a qualitative analysis of the organisational benefits and challenges

Steve Gillard; Christine Edwards; Sarah Gibson; Katherine Owen; Christine Wright

BackgroundThe provision of peer support as a component of mental health care, including the employment of Peer Workers (consumer-providers) by mental health service organisations, is increasingly common internationally. Peer support is strongly advocated as a strategy in a number of UK health and social care policies. Approaches to employing Peer Workers are proliferating. There is evidence to suggest that Peer Worker-based interventions reduce psychiatric inpatient admission and increase service user (consumer) empowerment. In this paper we seek to address a gap in the empirical literature in understanding the organisational challenges and benefits of introducing Peer Worker roles into mental health service teams.MethodsWe report the secondary analysis of qualitative interview data from service users, Peer Workers, non-peer staff and managers of three innovative interventions in a study about mental health self-care. Relevant data was extracted from interviews with 41 participants and subjected to analysis using Grounded Theory techniques. Organisational research literature on role adoption framed the analysis.ResultsPeer Workers were highly valued by mental health teams and service users. Non-peer team members and managers worked hard to introduce Peer Workers into teams. Our cases were projects in development and there was learning from the evolutionary process: in the absence of formal recruitment processes for Peer Workers, differences in expectations of the Peer Worker role can emerge at the selection stage; flexible working arrangements for Peer Workers can have the unintended effect of perpetuating hierarchies within teams; the maintenance of protective practice boundaries through supervision and training can militate against the emergence of a distinctive body of peer practice; lack of consensus around what constitutes peer practice can result in feelings for Peer Workers of inequality, disempowerment, uncertainty about identity and of being under-supported.ConclusionsThis research is indicative of potential benefits for mental health service teams of introducing Peer Worker roles. Analysis also suggests that if the emergence of a distinctive body of peer practice is not adequately considered and supported, as integral to the development of new Peer Worker roles, there is a risk that the potential impact of any emerging role will be constrained and diluted.


Health Services and Delivery Research | 2014

New ways of working in mental health services: a qualitative, comparative case study assessing and informing the emergence of new peer worker roles in mental health services in England

Steve Gillard; Christine Edwards; Sarah Gibson; Jess Holley; Katherine Owen


British Journal of Learning Disabilities | 2008

Moving home: the experiences of women with severe intellectual disabilities in transition from a locked ward

Katherine Owen; Jane Hubert; Sheila Hollins


Psychiatric Bulletin | 2006

Evaluating qualitative papers in a multidisciplinary evidence-based journal club: a pilot study

Raja Mukherjee; Katherine Owen; Sheila Hollins


Archive | 2014

Final report: knowledge mobilisation project

Steve Gillard; Christine Edwards; Sarah Gibson; Jess Holley; Katherine Owen


Archive | 2014

Chapter 3 analysis protocol

Steve Gillard; Christine Edwards; Sarah Gibson; Jess Holley; Katherine Owen


Archive | 2014

First version of the analytical framework

Steve Gillard; Christine Edwards; Sarah Gibson; Jess Holley; Katherine Owen


Archive | 2014

Theme content tables

Steve Gillard; Christine Edwards; Sarah Gibson; Jess Holley; Katherine Owen


Archive | 2014

Peer worker roles in mental health services in England

Steve Gillard; Christine Edwards; Sarah Gibson; Jess Holley; Katherine Owen


Archive | 2014

Part 1 interview schedule

Steve Gillard; Christine Edwards; Sarah Gibson; Jess Holley; Katherine Owen

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Steve Gillard

University of Southampton

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