Partnership between people who use services, their carers, and professionals is seen as an increasingly important aspect of providing a quality service across health and social care. The concept is enshrined in national policy, but the application of it is patchy at best, and has partly been undermined by constant restructuring and organisational change ‐ both in partnership working and in the organisations set up to deliver health and social care. Partnership that recognises service user/survivor expertise and assets and promotes equal and reciprocal working between staff and users is being recast as ‘co‐production’ or ‘co‐creation’ in UK public policy. The Jersey Partnership Project demonstrates a co‐productive approach, which is being seen as a way forward for adult social care service development and design.The Partnership Project, which commenced in the summer of 2009, and which is reaching the conclusion of its first stage at the time of writing, brings together experts by experience and mental health professionals, including a number of the latter who use services themselves, in a way that is designed to map out a new way of working, in partnership, across services. The Project is due to complete its first stage in June 2010, and further stages, perhaps bringing in a wider range of community services, are under discussion, following a presentation to the Jersey Minister for Health in November 2009.This article explores the notion of partnership as both ‘truth‐telling’ and ‘walking on common ground’, allowing those who provide and those who make use of services to enter into a sharing of experiences and knowledge, and an integrated spirit, that provides a clearer direction for developing adult mental health services in Jersey. The article then goes on to consider some of the barriers to more inclusive ways of working and looks at the current discourse and practices around the ‘co‐production’ agenda. Finally, the article covers the practical operation of the Partnership Project looking at structure and learning points and concludes by looking to the final six months of the Project and beyond.
Article navigation
6 July 2010
This article was originally published in
International Journal of Leadership in Public Services
Review Article|
July 06 2010
The Partnership Project: learning from experts by experience in mental health services; the Jersey Partnership perspective Available to Purchase
Samantha Bolam;
Samantha Bolam
Partnership Project Lead for Jersey Focus on Mental Health
Search for other works by this author on:
Sarah Carr;
Sarah Carr
Faculty of Health, Staffordshire University, UK
Search for other works by this author on:
Peter Gilbert
Peter Gilbert
National Development Team for inclusion (NDTi), UK
Search for other works by this author on:
Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Online ISSN: 2042-8642
Print ISSN: 1754-8187
© Emerald Group Publishing Limited
2010
International Journal of Leadership in Public Services (2010) 6 (2): 54–67.
Citation
Bolam S, Carr S, Gilbert P (2010), "The Partnership Project: learning from experts by experience in mental health services; the Jersey Partnership perspective". International Journal of Leadership in Public Services, Vol. 6 No. 2 pp. 54–67, doi: https://doi.org/10.5042/ijlps.2010.0354
Download citation file:
433
Views
Suggested Reading
Recovery college intervention for people living with BPD
Mental Health and Social Inclusion (July,2022)
Foregrounding the perspectives of mental health services users during the COVID-19 pandemic
Mental Health and Social Inclusion (July,2020)
Co-delivered and co-produced: creating a recovery college in partnership
The Journal of Mental Health Training, Education and Practice (April,2014)
Recovery in spirit
Mental Health and Social Inclusion (March,2019)
Exploring the experience of co-designing mental health services in the national health service as an Expert by Experience
Mental Health Review Journal (January,2026)
Related Chapters
YouTube Videos as Agents of Social Inclusion and Therapy Among Gender-based Violence Survivors
Gender and Media Representation: Perspectives from Sub-Saharan Africa
Boundaryless Work, Psychological Detachment and Sleep: Does Working ‘Anytime – Anywhere’ Equal Employees Are ‘Always on’?
New Ways of Working Practices: Antecedents and Outcomes
From Makers to Breakers: A New Dimension in Worldwide Waste Management
Sustainable Waste Management: Proceedings of the International Symposium held at the University of Dundee, Scotland, UK on 9–11 September 2003
Recommended for you
These recommendations are informed by your reading behaviors and indicated interests.
