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Australian Health Review Australian Health Review Society
Journal of the Australian Healthcare & Hospitals Association
RESEARCH ARTICLE

Implementing recovery-oriented practice in older people’s mental health services: the NSW experience

Roderick McKay https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3281-057X A B C D E , Kate Jackson D and John Stevens D
+ Author Affiliations
- Author Affiliations

A Health Education and Training Institute, Sydney, NSW, Australia.

B The University of Notre Dame, School of Medicine, Sydney, NSW, Australia.

C University of New South Wales, School of Psychiatry, Sydney, NSW, Australia.

D Mental Health Branch, NSW Ministry of Health, Sydney, NSW, Australia. Kate.Jackson@health.nsw.gov.au; John.Stevens@health.nsw.gov.au

E Corresponding author. Email: Roderick.McKay@health.nsw.gov.au

Australian Health Review 46(4) 426-431 https://doi.org/10.1071/AH21155
Submitted: 29 April 2021  Accepted: 14 September 2021   Published: 23 November 2021

Abstract

Personal recovery is central to Australian mental health standards, but promoting recovery-oriented practice remains a wicked problem (ie complex, with definitions and appropriate interventions impacted upon by context and values), with limited evidence regarding effective implementation. This case study re-examines a statewide initiative to enhance recovery-oriented practice in older people’s mental health services in New South Wales from the perspective of complex adaptive systems. The initiative consisted of three key strategies: (1) statewide collaborative leadership and practice resources; (2) locally determined and led improvement projects; and (3) evaluating, disseminating and sustaining initiative outcomes. Published outcomes of the initiative, related policy and benchmarking materials and author reflections are used to propose lessons for other services and policy makers. From a systems perspective, a relatively small investment from a state policy unit to enhance a facilitating environment resulted in the emergence of local leaders and voluntary participation of services within 80% of local health districts without funding incentives. Local leaders and activities informed statewide policies and models of care to sustain practice change. Limitations included variability in project scopes and the involvement of people with lived experience, as well as the level of refinement in change management approach. Self-audit and consumer-rated experience suggest resilience of practice and culture change. The outcomes are consistent with conceptualisations of mental health services being complex adaptive systems requiring distributive leadership. Established mechanisms encouraging statewide cooperation between clinicians, service managers and policy makers may have been significant facilitators of engagement in practice change.

What is known about this topic? Recovery remains an important concept for older people with mental ill health, with implementation of recovery-oriented practice a wicked problem.

What does this paper add? Central policy investment in a collaborative facilitatory environment can stimulate the emergence of local leadership and investment in actions to enhance recovery orientation. As predicted by complex adaptive systems theory, the impact of the leaders developed may be broader than the sum of individual project outcomes.

What are the implications for practitioners? A start where you can message can engage and enable leaders in feasible and locally relevant changes consistent with a statewide strategy. This may be a feasible approach to improving recovery orientation in mental health care services for and beyond older people, with potential implications for addressing other wicked problems in health care.


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