2023
DOI: 10.1186/s40900-023-00435-4
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Co-learning commentary: a patient partner perspective in mental health care research

Abstract: Background Although including patients as full, active members of research teams is becoming more common, there are few accounts about how to do so successfully, and almost none of these are written by patient partners themselves. Three patient partners contributed their lived experience to a three-year, multi-component mental health research project in British Columbia, Canada. As patient partners, we contributed to innovative co-learning in this project, resulting in mutual respect and wide-r… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…According to Riches et al [ 9 ], including people with lived experience on project teams is foundational and important throughout the research cycle. But often, as PRPs on research teams, we are left feeling that our expertise as people with lived experience, and our other skills and professional expertise that we bring to the team is undervalued.…”
Section: Main Bodymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…According to Riches et al [ 9 ], including people with lived experience on project teams is foundational and important throughout the research cycle. But often, as PRPs on research teams, we are left feeling that our expertise as people with lived experience, and our other skills and professional expertise that we bring to the team is undervalued.…”
Section: Main Bodymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Patient partners and researchers have reported on the benefits of co-learning in research projects that include patients and caregivers as members of the research team [ 22 ]. These benefits include opportunities to develop empathy, trust, and mutual respect by learning about one another’s experiences and viewpoints, developing communication skills (e.g., decreased use of jargon or stigmatizing language, pre-circulation of meeting materials), and creation of “creativity, inclusivity, and cooperative ethos within our team, with plenty of space for kindness and laughter along the way” [ 22 , (p4)]. These benefits of co-learning have also been observed in training available to community partners and researchers to prepare for participatory research project [ 23 ].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%