A1 Journal article (refereed)
A Participatory Survey to Investigate the Long-Term Effectiveness of Adult Psychiatric Services (PSILEAPS) : Baseline Data and Recruitment Experiences (2025)


Bergström, T., Gauffin, T., Hietasaari, T., Koivuniemi, N., Leinonen, A., Öfverberg, E., Viitakoski, R., Haaraniemi, T., Partanen, K., Rantamaa, K., Yrjänheikki, V., Jauhiainen, T., Olli, A., Miettunen, J., & Petäjäniemi, J. (2025). A Participatory Survey to Investigate the Long-Term Effectiveness of Adult Psychiatric Services (PSILEAPS) : Baseline Data and Recruitment Experiences. Community Mental Health Journal, Early online. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10597-025-01462-z


JYU authors or editors


Publication details

All authors or editorsBergström, Tomi; Gauffin, Tapio; Hietasaari, Teija; Koivuniemi, Nina; Leinonen, Anne; Öfverberg, Enni; Viitakoski, Reetta; Haaraniemi, Timo; Partanen, Katja; Rantamaa, Katariina; et al.

Journal or seriesCommunity Mental Health Journal

ISSN0010-3853

eISSN1573-2789

Publication year2025

Publication date11/03/2025

VolumeEarly online

PublisherSpringer Nature

Publication countryUnited States

Publication languageEnglish

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1007/s10597-025-01462-z

Publication open accessOpenly available

Publication channel open accessPartially open access channel

Publication is parallel published (JYX)https://jyx.jyu.fi/handle/123456789/100726


Abstract

In clinical psychology and psychiatry, traditional hypothesis testing is challenging due to the subjective and contextual nature of the studied phenomenon. To address this, more exploratory and participatory research is needed. This paper reports recruitment experiences and baseline data of a prospective exploratory cohort study with participatory elements, initiated in mental health services in one Finnish region. The primary aims, design, and survey for data collection were developed through community meetings involving local mental health workers, peer experts, and service users. Over 2 weeks, all mental health service users, their care teams, and social network members were asked to share their views on the reasons for needing services and what aspects of treatment have been or could be helpful or unhelpful. Descriptive statistics summarized baseline data, and simple thematic analysis examined field notes on supporting and hindering aspects of the study design. A total of 117 service users, 54 care team members, and 34 social network members participated, with a service user attrition rate of 40–50%. The study achieved 79% of the target sample size. Women and participants with mood disorder diagnoses and long-term service usage were overrepresented. Findings suggest that integrating participatory research into Finnish public mental health services would require additional resources. Despite its limitations, the collected data will facilitate exploratory research into real-life mental health treatment processes from various perspectives.


Keywordsparticipatory researchclinical psychologymental health services

Free keywordsparticipatory research; adult psychiatric services; recruitment experiences; exploratory cohort study


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Ministry reportingYes

Preliminary JUFO rating1


Last updated on 2025-13-03 at 11:28