Continuing professional development in mental health: Promoting dialogue and reflection through art

International policy mandates that mental health consumers and carers are involved in the continuing professional development of nurses. However, within the literature, continuing professional development of mental health nurses continues to be delivered in didactic formats, with few examples of men...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nurse education in practice 2018-09, Vol.32, p.34-36
Hauptverfasser: De Vecchi, Nadia, Kenny, Amanda, Dickson-Swift, Virginia, Kidd, Susan
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container_title Nurse education in practice
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creator De Vecchi, Nadia
Kenny, Amanda
Dickson-Swift, Virginia
Kidd, Susan
description International policy mandates that mental health consumers and carers are involved in the continuing professional development of nurses. However, within the literature, continuing professional development of mental health nurses continues to be delivered in didactic formats, with few examples of mental health nurses and consumers engaging together in the process. Consumers and carers are often excluded from professional development programs because of structural discrimination. Where they are included, it is often through storytelling that has been sanitised of challenging practice issues. There are few opportunities for reflection on practice. The purpose of this discussion article is to create debate about the involvement of mental health consumers and carers in professional development. Educators should consider artmaking between mental health consumers, carers and clinicians as a useful participatory process to support professional development, co-learning, mutual dialogue and reflection on practice. •Mental health policy mandates consumer involvement in professional development.•Consumers are excluded from professional development because of discrimination.•Reflection is vital for practice change but neglected in professional development.•Artmaking can engage consumers and nurses in mutual reflection and dialogue.•Participatory artmaking can enable consumer knowledge to be included in practice.
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subjects Active Learning
Aging (Individuals)
Artmaking
Beliefs
Caregivers
Caregivers - psychology
Collaboration
Consumers
Continuing professional development
Discrimination
Education
Empathy
Health Personnel - psychology
Health promotion
Health services
Humans
Inservice Education
Labor Force
Learning Activities
Learning Processes
Mental disorders
Mental health
Mental health care
Mental health professionals
Mental Health Programs
Mental Health Services
Midwifery
Nurses
Nursing
Obstetrics
Patients - psychology
Professional development
Psychiatric nurses
Psychiatric Nursing
Psychiatric-mental health nursing
Reflection
Reflective Teaching
Staff Development - methods
Storytelling
Supervision
Thinking Skills
title Continuing professional development in mental health: Promoting dialogue and reflection through art
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