Evaluating recovery colleges: a co-created scoping review

J Ment Health. 2023 Aug;32(4):813-834. doi: 10.1080/09638237.2022.2140788. Epub 2022 Nov 8.

Abstract

Background: Recovery Colleges (RCs) are education-based centres providing information, networking, and skills development for managing mental health, well-being, and daily living. A central principle is co-creation involving people with lived experience of mental health/illness and/or addictions (MHA). Identified gaps are RCs evaluations and information about whether such evaluations are co-created.

Aims: We describe a co-created scoping review of how RCs are evaluated in the published and grey literature. Also assessed were: the frameworks, designs, and analyses used; the themes/outcomes reported; the trustworthiness of the evidence; and whether the evaluations are co-created.

Methods: We followed Arksey and O'Malley's methodology with one important modification: "Consultation" was re-conceptualised as "co-creator engagement" and was the first, foundational step rather than the last, optional one.

Results: Seventy-nine percent of the 43 included evaluations were peer-reviewed, 21% grey literature. These evaluations represented 33 RCs located in the UK (58%), Australia (15%), Canada (9%), Ireland (9%), the USA (6%), and Italy (3%).

Conclusion: Our findings depict a developing field that is exploring a mix of evaluative approaches. However, few evaluations appeared to be co-created. Although most studies referenced co-design/co-production, few described how much or how meaningfully people with lived experience were involved in the evaluation.

Keywords: Recovery college; co-creation; evaluation; scoping review.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Australia
  • Canada
  • Humans
  • Italy
  • Mental Disorders* / therapy
  • Mental Health