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Safety Planning is a recovery-orientated approach to risk management within mental health context. This study wants to answer the question 'how, why, for whom and it what circumstances does safety planning work? It will do this by carrying out a realist evaluation to identify programme theories by conducting a three phase study, reviewing materials of a Safety Planning training course, interviewing service users, carers and mental health professionals who have attended the training course, and/or use safety planning tools and techniques, adopting theory from existing literature and adding evaluator's insider knowledge. This data will be used to describe programme theory of safety planning that can be applied across diverse mental health settings, including NHS inpatient and community, and is designed to be adopted across different contexts. It will use a realist methodology to understand how safety planning works to develop the skills needed to manage risks associated with mental health difficulties in ways which increase an individual's quality of life.
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Inclusion criteria
Carer participants - have cared for someone who lived with risks associated with their mental health difficulties / have attended the safety planning recovery college course delivered by NSFT / know how to access emotional support should they require it during the study Mental health professionals - have either a) supported people in a professional capacity to manage risks associated with mental health difficulties, b) attended either the safety planning recovery college course (NSFT) OR a version of safety planning training delivered within NSFT c) have some responsibility for safety planning and risk management within the trust. MUST HAVE knowledge of how to access staff wellbeing and support systems for emotional support should they require it during the study.
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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