Implementing Open Dialogue in an Australian Context
Overview
This implementation brief from The ALIVE National Centre for Mental Health Research Translation examines Open Dialogue as a recovery-oriented, rights-based approach to supporting people experiencing psychological distress and their social networks. It outlines the principles and fidelity elements of the Open Dialogue model, summarises international and Australian evidence on its effectiveness, and explores the growing role of lived experience practitioners through Peer-supported Open Dialogue (POD). The brief addresses the significant scaling challenges facing implementation in Australia and provides practical guidelines across systems, community, service, and individual practitioner levels.
Developed by The ALIVE National Centre for Mental Health Research Translation
Key insights
This implementation brief introduces Open Dialogue as a recovery-oriented, human-rights-aligned approach to mental health support that centres dialogue, network inclusion, and lived experience. Originally developed in Finland and now implemented across more than 24 countries, Open Dialogue offers a fundamentally different way of organising mental health support — one that prioritises rapid access, equal voices, and needs-adapted care. While the evidence base is growing, significant scaling challenges remain in Australia, and the brief calls for coordinated action across policy, service, community, and practitioner levels to increase the availability and sustainability of Open Dialogue in Australian contexts.
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The brief directly calls on policy makers and government structures to fund embedded research, support trials, and develop adapted funding and practice models to enable Open Dialogue implementation in mainstream services.
Organisational leaders are identified as essential to creating the conditions for staff and teams to initiate and sustain the significant practice changes that Open Dialogue requires, including shifts in crisis response, staffing models, and clinical culture.
Open Dialogue practitioners and those considering training are a core audience, with specific guidance on the nature and intensity of training, the transformative and potentially disruptive outcomes of practice development, and the importance of reflective practice.
The brief identifies significant gaps in the Australian and international evidence base and references ongoing large-scale trials, making it highly relevant to researchers in mental health, implementation science, and dialogical practice.
People experiencing psychological distress are the central focus of the Open Dialogue approach, and the brief's discussion of rights-based, person-centred, and network-inclusive practice makes it relevant to consumer advocates and those interested in alternatives to conventional mental health support.
Family members, friends, and supporters are explicitly positioned as essential participants in Open Dialogue network meetings. A lived experience quote from a family member is included, and community-level guidelines address the need to build family and network awareness of the approach.
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Categories
Resource type
Evidence Summary
Practice Guideline
Target audiences
Consumers
Carers
Practitioners
Researchers
Policymakers
Service Leaders
Translational research priority theme
Community-based models of care
Alternatives to compulsory treatment, seclusion and restraint
Workforce capability
Working with diverse consumers, families and communities
Embedding responsible, safe and ethical practice
Understanding and responding to trauma
Understanding and responding to mental health crisis and suicide
Working effectively with families, carers and supporters
Delivering holistic and collaborative assessment and care planning
Delivering compassionate care, support and treatment
Promoting prevention, early intervention and help-seeking
Supporting system navigation, partnerships and collaborative care
Enabling reflective and supportive ways of working
Embedding evidence-informed continuous improvement
Working effectively with digital technologies
Population cohort
Adults
Collaborative Centre core function
Lived Experience Participation
Service delivery
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