Neuropsychiatric Disease and Treatment (Feb 2024)

A Thematic Analysis Investigating the Inaugural Psychosis REACH Family Ambassador Peer Training Program

  • Vaswani-Bye A,
  • McCain C,
  • Blank JM,
  • Tennison ME,
  • Kopelovich SL

Journal volume & issue
Vol. Volume 20
pp. 233 – 245

Abstract

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Akansha Vaswani-Bye, Chris McCain, Jennifer M Blank, Mackenzie E Tennison, Sarah L Kopelovich Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USACorrespondence: Akansha Vaswani-Bye, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, University of Washington, Box 359911, 325 Ninth Ave, Seattle, WA, 98104, USA, Tel +1 206-744-9346, Fax +(206) 744-3236, Email [email protected]: Caregivers of loved ones with psychosis are tasked with navigating a barren care landscape for their loved ones and for themselves. The dearth of resources they face has a negative impact on outcomes for caregivers and their loved ones. The Psychosis REACH program, based on principles from Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for psychosis was developed as a community-based resource for families to address this care gap. A role for family peers called the Psychosis REACH Family Ambassadors (pRFAs) was developed to reinforce skill learning for caregivers by utilizing a task-sharing approach. This qualitative study sought to better understand pRFAs’ experiences in the inaugural training cohort of this program.Patients and Methods: Eleven pRFAs participated in semi-structured interviews with research coordinators via teleconference. Questions assessed the quality of the training, challenges and facilitators experienced in their role, and ways in which the program could be improved and expanded. Using thematic analysis, members of the research team coded interviews individually, discussed codes until consensus was reached, and iteratively developed themes based on codes that clustered based on meaning or content.Results: This process identified 5 key themes: The development of hope and recovery, the development of solidarity networks, the challenges of navigating boundaries, preferred pedagogical strategies, and the need for more support.Conclusion: Overall, the themes developed from this qualitative analysis demonstrate the value and feasibility of developing a caregiver peer network of pRFAs trained in recovery-oriented care and CBTp-informed skills to support other caregivers. Additionally, they highlight the challenges associated with being in the role of a pRFA and further efforts needed to align training content and learning management systems to the needs of pRFA trainees. These findings highlight the importance of expanding access to family peer training programs for the wellbeing of caregivers and loved ones with psychosis alike.Keywords: family interventions for psychosis, task-sharing, peer workforce development, family caregivers, cognitive behavioral therapy for psychosis

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