Peer support for accepting distressing reality: Expertise and experience-sharing in psychiatric peer-to-peer group discussions.

conversation analysis epistemics expert-by-experience peer support psychiatry

Journal

Health (London, England : 1997)
ISSN: 1461-7196
Titre abrégé: Health (London)
Pays: England
ID NLM: 9800465

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
27 Feb 2023
Historique:
entrez: 28 2 2023
pubmed: 1 3 2023
medline: 1 3 2023
Statut: aheadofprint

Résumé

Peer-based interventions are increasingly used for delivering mental health services to help people with an illness re-examine their situation and accept their illness as part of their life story. The role of the peer supporter in these interventions, known as experts-by-experience (EbE), is situated between mutual peer support and semi-professional service delivery, and they face the challenge of balancing an asymmetric, professional relationship with a reciprocal, mutuality-based, equal relationship. This article investigates how EbEs tackle this challenge when responding to clients' stories about their personal, distressing experiences in peer-based groups in psychiatric services. The results show how the EbEs responded to their clients' experience-sharing with two types of turns of talk. In the first response type, the EbEs highlighted reciprocal experience-sharing, nudging the clients toward accepting their illness. This invoked mutual affiliation and more problem-talk from the clients. In the second response type, the EbEs compromised reciprocal experience-sharing and advised clients on how to accept their illness in their everyday lives. This was considered less affiliative in relation to the client's problem description, and the sequence was brought to a close. Both response types involved epistemic asymmetries that needed to be managed in the interaction. Based on our analysis, semi-professional, experience-based expertise involves constant epistemic tensions, as the participants struggle to retain the mutual orientation toward peer-based experience-sharing and affiliation.

Identifiants

pubmed: 36851862
doi: 10.1177/13634593231156822
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

13634593231156822

Auteurs

Elina Weiste (E)

Finnish Institute of Occupational Health, Finland.

Melisa Stevanovic (M)

Tampere University, Finland.

Lise-Lotte Uusitalo (LL)

University of Helsinki, Finland.

Hanna Toiviainen (H)

Tampere University, Finland.

Classifications MeSH