Safety and autonomy in the Australian mental health services sector
Overview
This 2016 University of Melbourne report examines international best practices for balancing safety and autonomy in Australian mental health services following the UN Convention on Rights of Persons with Disabilities. It reviews approaches from England, Finland, and Australia, recommending communication-focused, recovery-oriented practices that empower service users while maintaining workplace safety.
Developed by Mind Australia and University of Melbourne
Key insights
Key Insights:
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Communication and co-production - Open dialogue between all parties reduces crisis situations
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Prevention over containment - Safe environments prevent conflicts better than restrictive measures
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Trauma-informed approaches - Understanding trauma histories improves intervention effectiveness significantly
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Lived experience workforce - Employing people with mental health experience enhances services
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Flexible, personalised care - Individual recovery plans work better than standardised approaches
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Staff training essential - Proper implementation requires comprehensive, ongoing staff development programs
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Risk reconceptualisation - View circumstances, not individuals, as sources of risk
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Carer engagement crucial - Supporting family/friends creates stronger recovery environments
Did this resource draw on transformative evidence?
This document was not based on experiential expertise. It's a literature review examining international case studies and academic research. While it discusses the value of "Lived Experience Workforce" approaches, the actual report was produced through academic research methods rather than drawing from the authors' personal mental health experiences.
This document was partially based on practice wisdom. While primarily a literature review, it examined real-world implementation of approaches like England's Care Programme Approach, Finland's Open Dialogue, and Australia's Lived Experience Workforce, analyzing their practical successes and failures to inform best practice recommendations.
his document was heavily based on research and evaluation insights. It's explicitly described as a "scoping review of the literature" that analyzed academic research, policy evaluations, and assessments of international mental health approaches, including outcome studies and implementation reviews to develop evidence-based recommendations.
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Categories
Resource type
Literature Review