Dataset for "What Should Inpatient Psychological Therapies be for? Qualitative Views of Service Users on Outcomes"

This data outlines the views of 14 participants who had an inpatient admission within the last year, on what outcomes they think are important to measure in psychological (talking therapy) research trials in acute mental health inpatient wards. We define outcomes as the measures of treatment or intervention which reflect changes or results that occur. For example, for a clinical research trial of how well psychological therapy works, outcomes might include a quality of life measure or relapse or reoccurrence. This data includes the 14 transcripts (written records of the oral content) of the interviews which included pre-planned open questions and prompts.

This data outlines the views of 14 participants who had an inpatient admission within the last year, on what outcomes they think are important to measure in psychological therapy trials in acute mental health inpatient wards. This data includes the 14 transcripts of the qualitative semi-structured interviews.

Keywords:
Outcomes, acute, inpatient, mental health, psychological therapies, service users, views
Subjects:
Psychology

Cite this dataset as:
Morgan, C., Jacobsen, P., 2023. Dataset for "What Should Inpatient Psychological Therapies be for? Qualitative Views of Service Users on Outcomes". Bath: University of Bath Research Data Archive. Available from: https://doi.org/10.15125/BATH-01265.

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Access on request: While every effort has been made to anonymise the transcripts fully, they are accessible on request in order to protect participants from possible reidentification.

Creators

Ceri Morgan
University of Bath

Pamela Jacobsen
Supervisor
University of Bath

Contributors

Rebecca Hiscocks
Contributor
University of Bath

Lucy Clarkson
Contributor
University of Bath

India Hopkins
Contributor
University of Bath

Katherine Berry
Contributor
University of Manchester

Natasha Tyler
Contributor
University of Manchester

Lisa Wood
Contributor
University College London

University of Bath
Rights Holder

Coverage

Collection date(s):

From 20 May 2022 to 15 July 2022

Geographical coverage:

United Kingdom

Documentation

Data collection method:

The interview schedule was piloted with a Person with Personal Experience Researcher (LC) and included questions adapted from a previous Core Outcome Set study (Tyler et al., 2020). The semi-structured interviews were conducted remotely by either video call or telephone and audio-recorded for transcription.

Data processing and preparation activities:

The transcripts were anonymised and demographic details were removed. The data includes the transcription from the first question to the final question.

Technical details and requirements:

The transcripts are in Microsoft Word format.

Additional information:

Transcription was completed following the Transcription Notation System for Orthographic Transcription (revised from Braun & Clarke, 2013).

Methodology link:

Tyler, N., Wright, N., Grundy, A., and Waring, J., 2020. Developing a core outcome set for interventions to improve discharge from mental health inpatient services: a survey, Delphi and consensus meeting with key stakeholder groups. BMJ Open, 10(5), e034215. Available from: https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2019-034215.

Templates

SU_Interview … guide_V2_24.06.22.docx
application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document (21kB)
Creative Commons: Attribution 4.0

Interview schedule topic guide

Funders

Publication details

Publication date: 12 October 2023
by: University of Bath

Version: 1

DOI: https://doi.org/10.15125/BATH-01265

URL for this record: https://researchdata.bath.ac.uk/id/eprint/1265

Related papers and books

Morgan, C., Clarkson, L., Hiscocks, R., Hopkins, I., Berry, K., Tyler, N., Wood, L., and Jacobsen, P., 2023. What should inpatient psychological therapies be for? Qualitative views of service users on outcomes. Health Expectations, 27(1). Available from: https://doi.org/10.1111/hex.13889.

Contact information

Please contact the Research Data Service in the first instance for all matters concerning this item.

Contact person: Pamela Jacobsen

Departments:

Faculty of Humanities & Social Sciences
Psychology