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Heather's avatar

I read your introduction as saying the speakers had both lived experiences and were clinicians... Only to discover you were referring to a peer worker, who is not classed as a clinician here in Australia, has no AHPRA (health professional) registration... provides non-clinical services... Yet you call them a clinician??? Unfortunately this sets me up to be disappointed in the peer worker, for lacking clinical competency, rather than just appreciating the input of a peer worker, who makes their living from their lived experience. I didn't read anything that specified any of the contributors were truly clinicians - psychiatrists etc, registered health professionals at least - and I would have been fascinated if this conference genuinely was groundbreaking in its foregrounding of their experiences. They do exist, I can think of several practicing psychiatrists with lived experience of serious mental illness.

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Graham Morgan's avatar

I wish I had gone to this conference, it sounds fascinating - even us vulnerable people can be exposed to risky ideas by the way! I take a very conventional view to mental illness and spend a lot of time wishing i could really believe in my diagnosis of schizophrenia for which i have been compulsorily treated for the last 14 years - but i do like to challenge and be challenged about my very conventional assumptions.

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