Technical knowledge | Expert-by-experience knowledge | |
---|---|---|
Features | • Scientific • Systematic and well-documented • Common languages shared across multiple professionals • Findings are not always relevant to service users’ lived experience • It greatly depends on practitioners’ ability to understand a perspective other than their own and to respond empathetically | • Acquired through experience: “been there, done that” • High ecological validity, very practical • It does not always generalize to other people’s circumstances • It depends on the service setting, training, and skills of PSWs, such as interpersonal skills, adjustment to the new PSWs role |
Challenges | • Combining technical and expert-by-experience knowledge in the search for personal recovery is not always a straight-forward process. The two forms of knowledge sometimes work in a complementary manner, but at other times they work in a more tensioned, question-raising way that can broaden our understanding of how knowledge is interpreted by multiple parties (e.g., mental health practitioners, clients or family members) • There is a pressing need to move from a situation in which health knowledge construction is hierarchical to one in which it occurs by consensus, horizontally. Such a shift would allow healthcare professionals and clients to contribute to the co-construction of knowledge that forms the basis for decision-making in the recovery journey. |