This Australian study was designed to assess the effectiveness of a consumer-led recovery training program.A non-equivalent control group study design was used to assess changes in recovery knowledge and attitudes pre-training, immediately post-training, and at 6 months post-training.Relative to the comparison group, those receiving training demonstrated significant gains in knowledge at follow-up.A consumer-led training program was able to improve provider knowledge of recovery based practice. While the RKI was developed in the USA, it proved to be a useful measure of change in an Australian sample
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