Using interpersonal process recall to understand empowerment processes in a collaborative care intervention for people with a diagnosis of psychosis
Baker, E; Gwernan-Jones, R; Britten, N; et al.McCabe, C; Gill, L; Byng, R; Gask, L
Date: 22 July 2019
Journal
Psychosis
Publisher
Taylor & Francis (Routledge)
Publisher DOI
Abstract
Evaluation of recovery-focused interventions for people with psychosis may be
enhanced by the use of Interpersonal Process Recall (IPR). The aim of this study
was to examine whether the inclusion of IPR alongside semi-structured
interviews in the formative evaluation of a novel collaborative care intervention
increased understanding ...
Evaluation of recovery-focused interventions for people with psychosis may be
enhanced by the use of Interpersonal Process Recall (IPR). The aim of this study
was to examine whether the inclusion of IPR alongside semi-structured
interviews in the formative evaluation of a novel collaborative care intervention
increased understanding about both practitioner and service user experiences. It
also explored the impact of the IPR process on participants. Four service users
and the practitioner delivering the intervention participated in semi-structured
interviews and an adapted IPR process. The themes identified from different data
sources were systematically compared using framework analysis. Semi-structured
interviews indicated that the intervention was operating as intended but IPR data
revealed exceptions. Practitioner IPR interviews identified practitioner barriers to
delivery and fostered critical self-reflection. Service user IPR interviews
facilitated critical feedback but also caused some distress. Interviews gave more
information about organisational level contextual factors. IPR increased
understanding of how the intervention was being delivered and experienced. IPR
should be used alongside other forms of qualitative data collection. The potential
of IPR to impact on intervention delivery should be taken into account. Further
research is needed to establish for whom IPR is likely to be most effective.
Institute of Health Research
Collections of Former Colleges
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