@article{a08d439525f5404cb239a0a449e8d659,
title = "Young people's participation in their own mental health care: Session-by-session feedback in youth mental health services (headspace)",
abstract = "Aim: Young people's participation in their own mental healthcare requires ways for them to provide feedback to their clinicians on how they are experiencing their treatment. Key dimensions of session experience are willingness to attend, feeling listened to and understood, working on issues important to them, feeling hopeful for the future and feeling that things are improving in their lives. This study reports on young people's session experiences over time and by key demographics for headspace youth mental health services. Methods: The sample comprised 16 484 young people aged 12–25 years who commenced an episode of care at one of the 150 headspace centres between 1 July 2021 and 30 June 2022 and who had attended at least two services. Data were collected via the routinely collected headspace minimum data set. Results: Overall, young people reported very positive session experiences over all the session dimensions. Few demographic differences were found: session ratings were more positive for young adults (18+ years) compared with adolescents (under 18 years). Scores on all five dimensions improved with more visits, and willingness to attend and working on issues important to the young person were strong predictors of service engagement. Better session experience scores were associated with more positive ratings of quality of life. Conclusions: Young people experience their headspace sessions very positively, and more positive experiences are associated with better service engagement and quality of life. Routinely collecting session feedback gives young people a valuable way to participate in and inform their own care.",
keywords = "adolescent, mental health services, patient engagement, patient reported outcome measures, young adult",
author = "Debra Rickwood and Sabina Albrecht and Nic Telford",
note = "Funding Information: headspace is Australia's National Youth Mental Health Foundation, founded in 2006 and funded by the Australian Government (McGorry, Purcell et al., 2007 ; McGorry, Tanti et al., 2007 ). headspace is the largest national network of youth mental healthcare services worldwide, currently with over 154 centre\u2010based services across Australia and a suite of other programmes, including digital services (headspace National, 2023a ). The foundation of the headspace system is the headspace centre, which is a primary care, community\u2010based, integrated service hub providing highly accessible, youth\u2010friendly services that deliver evidence\u2010based interventions to young people to support their holistic mental health needs (Rickwood et al., 2019 ). Since establishment, the headspace national network of centres and online programmes has supported more than 865\u2009000 young Australians, providing 6.7 million services to help them to manage their mental health (headspace National, 2023b ). The headspace centre model has been shown to be cost\u2010effective through independent evaluation (KPMG, 2022 ), and internal evaluations reveal that 86% of centre clients report being satisfied with headspace and 71% achieve improvements in either psychological distress, social and occupational functioning, or quality of life (Rickwood, Albrecht et al., 2023 ; Rickwood, McEachran et al., 2023 ). Funding Information: This research was supported by headspace National Youth Mental Health Foundation. headspace is funded by the Australian Government. Open access publishing facilitated by University of Canberra, as part of the Wiley \u2010 University of Canberra agreement via the Council of Australian University Librarians. Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2024 The Author(s). Early Intervention in Psychiatry published by John Wiley & Sons Australia, Ltd.",
year = "2024",
doi = "10.1111/eip.13600",
language = "English",
pages = "1--11",
journal = "Early Intervention in Psychiatry",
issn = "1751-7885",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",
}