Narrative research and service user/survivor stories: A New Frontier for Research Ethics?

Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 23 (3):233-236 (2016)
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Abstract

Russo suggests that the personal narratives of those who have experienced mental and emotional distress now constitute a diverse and dispersed, nonetheless considerable, body of knowledge that is of interest to non–user/survivor researchers. The issues she raises about the potential use of that knowledge pose practical and ethical challenges to both user/survivor researchers and those from other research traditions. On reading this paper, I became conscious of my own work, where I have explored my personal experiences in the context of clinical research and the history of psychiatry. In one such piece, I describe myself as “a voice crying out from the data”, and use my...

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