International Journal of Social Research Methodology, 2012
Involvement of people who use health services as researchers is increasingly widely practised int... more Involvement of people who use health services as researchers is increasingly widely practised internationally, but methodological enquiry into how involvement impacts on research findings is lacking. A qualitative study of the experiences of people detained under the UK Mental Health Act (1983) used secondary analysis to explore the extent to which mental health service user researchers produced different interpretive narratives to conventional university researchers working on the same research team, and the potential to coproduce integrated analytical narrative to inform service improvement. We found we were able to articulate a range of situated analytical narratives on the detained patient experience and, through negotiating what each narrative meant in relation to the others, to coproduce an integrated analytical narrative that moved beyond what was already known about the detained patient experience. We concluded that research involving mental health service user researchers can coproduce new knowledge that might usefully inform service improvement.
International Journal of Social Research Methodology, 2011
Involvement of people who use health services as researchers is increasingly widely practised int... more Involvement of people who use health services as researchers is increasingly widely practised internationally, but methodological enquiry into how involvement impacts on research findings is lacking. A qualitative study of the experiences of people detained under the UK Mental Health Act (1983) used secondary analysis to explore the extent to which mental health service user researchers produced different interpretive narratives to conventional university researchers working on the same research team, and the potential to coproduce integrated analytical narrative to inform service improvement. We found we were able to articulate a range of situated analytical narratives on the detained patient experience and, through negotiating what each narrative meant in relation to the others, to coproduce an integrated analytical narrative that moved beyond what was already known about the detained patient experience. We concluded that research involving mental health service user researchers can coproduce new knowledge that might usefully inform service improvement.
International Journal of Social Research Methodology, 2012
Involvement of people who use health services as researchers is increasingly widely practised int... more Involvement of people who use health services as researchers is increasingly widely practised internationally, but methodological enquiry into how involvement impacts on research findings is lacking. A qualitative study of the experiences of people detained under the UK Mental Health Act (1983) used secondary analysis to explore the extent to which mental health service user researchers produced different interpretive narratives to conventional university researchers working on the same research team, and the potential to coproduce integrated analytical narrative to inform service improvement. We found we were able to articulate a range of situated analytical narratives on the detained patient experience and, through negotiating what each narrative meant in relation to the others, to coproduce an integrated analytical narrative that moved beyond what was already known about the detained patient experience. We concluded that research involving mental health service user researchers can coproduce new knowledge that might usefully inform service improvement.
International Journal of Social Research Methodology, 2011
Involvement of people who use health services as researchers is increasingly widely practised int... more Involvement of people who use health services as researchers is increasingly widely practised internationally, but methodological enquiry into how involvement impacts on research findings is lacking. A qualitative study of the experiences of people detained under the UK Mental Health Act (1983) used secondary analysis to explore the extent to which mental health service user researchers produced different interpretive narratives to conventional university researchers working on the same research team, and the potential to coproduce integrated analytical narrative to inform service improvement. We found we were able to articulate a range of situated analytical narratives on the detained patient experience and, through negotiating what each narrative meant in relation to the others, to coproduce an integrated analytical narrative that moved beyond what was already known about the detained patient experience. We concluded that research involving mental health service user researchers can coproduce new knowledge that might usefully inform service improvement.
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Papers by Lester Solano