Published 15 October 2025

MHP Research Summit: A Lived Experience Perspective

MHP Banner summit
Deb is a member of our lived experience Steering Group. She attended the Mental Health Platform Research Summit on 10th October 2025, and tells us about it from a Lived Experience, Non-Academic Perspective.

Acronyms: MHP: Mental Health Platform | PPI: Patient Public Involvement | SMI: Severe Mental Illness | BPD: Borderline Personality Disorder

Optimism

There was a buzz from the get-go. Delegates wowed by the Playfair grandeur - all arches, light & hubbub - keen to load up on pastries, nab a seat, say their hellos. It felt warm, optimistic.

Professor Dame Til Wykes’ opening talk - championing PPI at different stages of SMI research & advocating how this could boost impact - set such a positive tone.

For me, it felt brilliant - being part of something important, having jobs to do, meeting colleagues in the flesh (perhaps a bit too enthusiastically!), really listening, learning, writing reams of notes I’ll never re-read. Very much buoyed by coffee #1, 70mg of Lisdexamfetamine, & my Edinburgh nerd chic to be fair.

Playfair Library Hall at MHP Research Summit

Momentum

The mix of core sessions & workshops; 30 minute keynote speeches, shorter Hub presentations & three minute flash talks; on & off time; upstairs & downstairs - created a natural rhythm. Regular injections of caffeine & sugar, including MHP branded cakes (actually!) & a buffet lunch, helped sustain everyone’s energy levels.

Having researchers, clinicians, people with Lived Experience & external partners all in one beautiful space; hearing about developments across disciplines; & exploring opportunities for collaboration - felt super positive.

MHP Cake

Reports of solid PPI at the Platform level & across Hubs were encouraging. And by co-chairing, taking part in workshops, asking incisive questions, & properly engaging, those of us with Lived Experience sent a clear message:

This is about & for people like us. We know what’s important. We need to be heard. We’re integral, not optional.

I built up a bit of momentum of my own (especially after coffee #3) - mega bonding with the Lived Experience, Comms, & Complex Emotions teams; introducing myself to every head honcho from London & Oxford I could find (angling for more Lived Experience work, writing, & involvement in any drug trials going); & handing out business cards to anyone with an open paw or pocket (printed far too many!).

Disconnect

But huge positives & best intentions aside, a few things didn’t quite land for me.

Some of the language used about patients, findings & outcomes felt stark - stripped of compassion. I know that’s how research language rolls, but it didn’t always feel like the Lived Experience members in the audience were considered. And we definitely could’ve done with a trigger warning before the slide about suicide/attempted suicide rates for BPD. (Necessary, maybe - but upsetting nonetheless).

While the research developments themselves were obviously positive, it wasn’t particularly clear what that might mean for someone with SMI in terms of tangible improvements, creating a better quality of life, making a life worth living. The So What? was missing - a gap that certainly needs to be bridged.

Outlook

It’s clear the MHP & six Hubs have got off to a flying start, & there’s real momentum behind SMI research now. It’s also wonderful to know such bright academics have given their life’s work to mental health research & are so keen to collaborate. Thank you people!

It’s great to see PPI’s becoming a pre-requisite for funding & recognised for improving relevance, impact & value. And I still can’t quite believe I get to use my greatest curse (BPD) as a force for good & pathway to relaunch my career to be honest. Crazy!

So here’s to the MHP; research that listens as well as measures; speeches tailored to the whole audience; next year’s Summit in Sheffield; & plenty more opportunities in the meantime! 

Read more from the author
collaboration at the research summit

The Summit from an ECR Perspective

Read Elchin's blog