30 results
Search Results
2. 'To me, it's ones and zeros, but in reality that one is death': A qualitative study exploring researchers' experience of involving and engaging seldom‐heard communities in big data research.
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Teodorowski, Piotr, Rodgers, Sarah E., Fleming, Kate, Tahir, Naheed, Ahmed, Saiqa, and Frith, Lucy
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EXPERIMENTAL design , *PATIENT participation , *RESEARCH methodology , *SOCIAL media , *SOCIAL constructionism , *COMMUNITIES , *INTERVIEWING , *QUALITATIVE research , *SOUND recordings , *RESEARCH funding , *INTERPROFESSIONAL relations , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *DATA analytics , *THEMATIC analysis , *DATA analysis software , *PUBLIC opinion - Abstract
Background: Big data research requires public support. It has been argued that this can be achieved by public involvement and engagement to ensure that public views are at the centre of research projects. Researchers should aim to include diverse communities, including seldom‐heard voices, to ensure that a range of voices are heard and that research is meaningful to them. Objective: We explored how researchers involve and engage seldom‐heard communities around big data research. Methods: This is a qualitative study. Researchers who had experience of involving or engaging seldom‐heard communities in big data research were recruited. They were based in England (n = 5), Scotland (n = 4), Belgium (n = 2) and Canada (n = 1). Twelve semistructured interviews were conducted on Zoom. All interviews were audio‐recorded and transcribed, and we used reflexive thematic analysis to analyse participants' experiences. Results: The analysis highlighted the complexity of involving and engaging seldom‐heard communities around big data research. Four themes were developed to represent participants' experiences: (1) abstraction and complexity of big data, (2) one size does not fit all, (3) working in partnership and (4) empowering the public contribution. Conclusion: The study offers researchers a better understanding of how to involve and engage seldom‐heard communities in a meaningful way around big data research. There is no one right approach, with involvement and engagement activities required to be project‐specific and dependent on the public contributors, researchers' needs, resources and time available. Patient and Public Involvement: Two public contributors are authors of the paper and they were involved in the study design, analysis and writing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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3. Why choose a career in teaching? Exploring motivational factors that influence the decision to teach.
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Wang, Wenting and Wang, Ziyou
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COLLEGE students , *TEACHING , *VOCATIONAL guidance , *MOTIVATION (Psychology) , *ALTRUISM , *RESEARCH methodology , *INTERVIEWING , *QUALITATIVE research , *EXPERIENCE , *DECISION making , *SPECIAL degree programs , *STUDENTS , *TEACHERS , *EMPLOYEES' workload , *WAGES , *SOCIAL status , *PROFESSIONAL identity , *STUDENT attitudes , *STATISTICAL sampling , *DATA analysis software - Abstract
This paper reports the findings on motivational factors influencing teaching as a career choice from a qualitative study carried out in Scotland. Ten students undertaking a PGDE (Professional Graduate Diploma in Education) programme at one Scottish university were interviewed. The results indicate that the choice of a teaching career derived from the students' internal needs for personal achievement and from an altruistic dimension pertaining to helping and influencing young people. For some students, negative educational experiences played an important part in shaping their altruistic sense of offering the next generation an enjoyable school experience. Perceived intrinsic rewards of teaching appeared to deter and counteract negative thoughts or remarks about teachers' workload, salary and status. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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4. Widening or narrowing inequalities? The equity implications of digital tools to support COVID‐19 contact tracing: A qualitative study.
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O'Donnell, Catherine A., Macdonald, Sara, Browne, Susan, Albanese, Alessio, Blane, David, Ibbotson, Tracy, Laidlaw, Lynn, Heaney, David, and Lowe, David J.
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LITERACY , *PRIVACY , *MINORITIES , *FOCUS groups , *RESEARCH methodology , *PSYCHOLOGY of refugees , *INTERVIEWING , *LANGUAGE & languages , *QUALITATIVE research , *INTERNET access , *HEALTH literacy , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *PSYCHOSOCIAL factors , *MEDICAL ethics , *RESEARCH funding , *CONTACT tracing , *HEALTH equity , *THEMATIC analysis , *ETHNIC groups , *POVERTY , *COVID-19 pandemic , *INFORMATION technology , *PUBLIC opinion , *TRUST - Abstract
Background: As digital tools are increasingly used to support COVID‐19 contact tracing, the equity implications must be considered. As part of a study to understand the public's views of digital contact tracing tools developed for the national 'Test and Protect' programme in Scotland, we aimed to explore the views of groups often excluded from such discussions. This paper reports on their views about the potential for contact tracing to exacerbate inequalities. Methods: A qualitative study was carried out; interviews were conducted with key informants from organizations supporting people in marginalized situations, followed by interviews and focus groups with people recruited from these groups. Participants included, or represented, minority ethnic groups, asylum seekers and refugees and those experiencing multiple disadvantage including severe and enduring poverty. Results: A total of 42 people participated: 13 key informants and 29 members of the public. While public participants were supportive of contact tracing, key informants raised concerns. Both sets of participants spoke about how contact tracing, and its associated digital tools, might increase inequalities. Barriers included finances (inability to afford smartphones or the data to ensure access to the internet); language (digital tools were available only in English and required a degree of literacy, even for English speakers); and trust (many marginalized groups distrusted statutory organizations and there were concerns that data may be passed to other organizations). One strength was that NHS Scotland, the data guardian, is seen as a generally trustworthy organization. Poverty was recognized as a barrier to people's ability to self‐isolate. Some participants were concerned about giving contact details of individuals who might struggle to self‐isolate for financial reasons. Conclusions: The impact of contact tracing and associated digital tools on marginalized populations needs careful monitoring. This should include the contact tracing process and the ability of people to self‐isolate. Regular clear messaging from trusted groups and community members could help maintain trust and participation in the programme. Patient and Public Contribution: Our patient and public involvement coapplicant, L. L., was involved in all aspects of the study including coauthorship. Interim results were presented to our local Public and Patient Involvement and Engagement Group, who commented on interpretation and made suggestions about further recruitment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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5. COVID-19 contact tracing apps: UK public perceptions.
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Samuel, G., Roberts, S. L., Fiske, A., Lucivero, F., McLennan, S., Phillips, A., Hayes, S., and Johnson, S. B.
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PRIVACY , *COVID-19 , *MOBILE apps , *RESEARCH methodology , *PUBLIC health , *INTERVIEWING , *QUALITATIVE research , *MEDICAL ethics , *EMPLOYMENT , *CONTACT tracing , *PUBLIC opinion , *COVID-19 pandemic , *DIFFUSION of innovations , *LONGITUDINAL method , *EDUCATIONAL attainment - Abstract
In order to combat the COVID-19 pandemic, policymakers around the globe have increasingly invested in digital health technologies to support the 'test, track and trace' approach of containing the spread of the novel coronavirus. These technologies include mobile 'contact tracing' applications (apps), which can trace individuals likely to have come into contact with those who have reported symptoms or tested positive for the virus and request that they self-isolate. This paper takes a critical public health perspective that advocates for 'genuine participation' in public health interventions and emphasises the need to take citizen's knowledge into account during public health decision-making. In doing so, it presents and discusses the findings of a UK interview study that explored public views on the possibility of using a COVID-19 contact-tracing app public health intervention at the time the United Kingdom (UK) Government announced their decision to develop such a technology. Findings illustrated interviewees' range and degree of understandings, misconceptions, and concerns about the possibility of using an app. In particular, concerns about privacy and surveillance predominated. Interviewees associated these concerns much more broadly than health by identifying with pre-existent British national narratives associated with individual liberty and autonomy. In extending and contributing to ongoing sociological research with public health, we argue that understanding and responding to these matters is vital, and that our findings demonstrate the need for a forward-looking, anticipatory strategy for public engagement as part of the responsible innovation of the COVID-19 contact-tracing app in the UK. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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6. Medical students' experiences of a longitudinal integrated clerkship: a threshold concepts analysis.
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Gupta, Shalini and Howden, Stella
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SOCIAL role , *SCHOOL environment , *RURAL health services , *CONFIDENCE , *MEDICAL students , *RESEARCH methodology , *EDUCATION theory , *INTERVIEWING , *UNCERTAINTY , *UNDERGRADUATES , *EXPERIENCE , *LEARNING strategies , *PRIMARY health care , *INTERNSHIP programs , *QUALITATIVE research , *DIARY (Literary form) , *CONCEPTUAL structures , *STUDENTS , *PROFESSIONAL identity , *HEALTH care teams , *CLINICAL medicine , *CLINICAL competence , *STUDENT attitudes , *INTERDISCIPLINARY education , *THEMATIC analysis , *CLINICAL education , *LONGITUDINAL method - Abstract
Longitudinal Integrated Clerkships (LIC) are known to provide several pedagogical advantages including transformational educational experiences. The study explored the learning experience of undergraduate medical students who undertook a rural LIC in a Scottish primary care setting. This paper presents an analysis of the transformative role of LIC placements using the Threshold Concept (TC) theory. This qualitative study gathered students' perceptions of their LIC experience longitudinally through written and audio diaries over a period of 1–2 months. The issues narrated in diaries were followed-up in individual semi-structured interviews. Transcripts were thematically analysed to identify key characteristics of TCs using a criterion-based approach. Data from 12 audio and nine written diaries, and five interviews led to identification of three inter-connected themes associated with the LIC year: professional identity formation, becoming an agentic learner and comfort with uncertainty. These appeared transformative in nature and resembled threshold concepts in their character and effect. An active and legitimate role in the healthcare team, longitudinality and transdisciplinary learning during LIC placements were contributary towards navigating these thresholds. The LIC exposure provided transformative learning experiences, and a stable environment that facilitated acquisition of specific TCs in the medical students' journey towards becoming a doctor. LIC affordances fostered a transformed view of self, which was more confident in dealing with uncertainty, comfortable in the emerging professional identity, and described having enhanced agentic capabilities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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7. How do general practitioners understand health inequalities and do their professional roles offer scope for mitigation? Constructions derived from the deep end of primary care.
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Babbel, Breannon, Mackenzie, Mhairi, Hastings, Annette, and Watt, Graham
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ATTITUDE (Psychology) , *CONCEPTUAL structures , *HEALTH services accessibility , *HEALTH status indicators , *INTERVIEWING , *RESEARCH methodology , *HEALTH policy , *GENERAL practitioners , *PRIMARY health care , *QUALITATIVE research , *JUDGMENT sampling , *SOCIAL constructionism , *OCCUPATIONAL roles , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *THEMATIC analysis , *DATA analysis software , *HEALTH & social status - Abstract
Scotland is faced with pernicious health inequalities, which stem from inequalities in living conditions and the societal structures that create them. While action is needed to address the wider structural causes of health inequalities, the role of general practitioners (GPs) merits attention due to health care's potential to mitigate or exacerbate health inequalities. Minimal research, however, has explored how GPs understand the fundamental causes of health inequalities nor how they conceptualise their role in mitigating these. This paper aims to fill this gap using in-depth qualitative interviews with 24 GPs working in some of Scotland's most socio-economically disadvantaged, urban areas. Using Raphael's SDH discourse framework, this paper found clear linkages between GPs' perceptions of their patients, how they defined the 'problem' of health inequalities, and what they thought could be done to tackle them in disadvantaged areas. In general, there was convergence on how interviewees viewed their role in mitigating health inequalities through their work with individual patients. However, greater variation was found when describing the boundaries of their role and how far these extended beyond individual encounters. Specifically, only those GPs fluent in discussing structural causes of health inequalities discussed obligations to change local systems via strengthening community linkages and to influence higher level policies related to the SDH. This suggests that while there is a degree of what Metzl and Hansen deem 'structural competency' amongst some GPs working in disadvantaged areas, the scope remains to deepen this competency more broadly. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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8. Expanding the methodological repertoire of participatory research into homelessness: The utility of the mobile phone diary.
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Karadzhov, Dimitar
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CELL phones , *RESEARCH , *NOMADS , *PSYCHOTHERAPY patients , *RESEARCH methodology , *CONVALESCENCE , *INTERVIEWING , *MEDICAL cooperation , *DIARY (Literary form) , *MEDICAL care research , *QUALITATIVE research , *EXPERIENCE , *SOCIAL isolation , *SOCIAL work research , *PSYCHOSOCIAL factors , *RESEARCH funding , *AT-risk people , *HOMELESSNESS , *HOMELESS persons , *PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation , *THEMATIC analysis , *DIFFUSION of innovations , *ADULTS - Abstract
Participatory research methodologies have expanded the opportunities for critical, emancipatory and democratic health and social work research. However, their practical application in research with vulnerable participants has historically been challenging due to ethical, practical and theoretical concerns. Individuals who are homeless are typically seen as 'hard-to-reach', transient, 'hidden' and even chaotic participant populations. Unsurprisingly, examples of the use of innovative participatory research techniques with those groups have been relatively scarce. This paper aimed to address this gap by discussing the application of one such technique – the mobile phone diary in research with multiply disadvantaged homeless adults. Diary methods are situated within the qualitative research on health, illness and social marginality, and the enhanced capabilities of the mobile phone diary are highlighted. The author illustrates the application of the mobile phone diary in his participatory research on the everyday life narratives of adults with serious mental illness (SMI) who were homeless. The process of designing the mobile phone diary is detailed. Following this, participant testimonies of their use of the mobile phone diary are presented. They demonstrate the participatory and inclusive nature, as well as the cathartic and empowering potential, of this technique. The methodological contributions and challenges and the theoretical generativity of the mobile phone diary method are discussed. The mobile phone diary is a feasible approach for eliciting evocative, contextualised and nuanced accounts of the lived experience of homelessness, social isolation, coping and recovery. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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9. Identifying strategies to overcome roadblocks to utilising near real-time healthcare and administrative data to create a Scotland-wide learning health system.
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Mukherjee, Mome, Cresswell, Kathrin, and Sheikh, Aziz
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MEDICAL quality control , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL care , *INTERVIEWING , *NATIONAL health services , *QUALITATIVE research , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *ELECTRONIC health records , *JUDGMENT sampling , *STATISTICAL sampling , *THEMATIC analysis , *DATA analysis software - Abstract
Creating a learning health system could help reduce variations in quality of care. Success is dependent on timely access to health data. To explore the barriers and facilitators to timely access to patients’ data, we conducted in-depth semi-structured interviews with 37 purposively sampled participants from government, the NHS and academia across Scotland. Interviews were analysed using the framework approach. Participants were of the view that Scotland could play a leading role in the exploitation of routine data to drive forward service improvements, but highlighted major impediments: (i) persistence of paper-based records and a variety of information systems; (ii) the need for a proportionate approach to managing information governance; and (iii) the need for support structures to facilitate accrual, processing, linking, analysis and timely use and reuse of data for patient benefit. There is a pressing need to digitise and integrate existing health information infrastructures, guided by a nationwide proportionate information governance approach and the need to enhance technological and human capabilities to support these efforts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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10. Social enterprises' impact on older people's health and wellbeing: exploring Scottish experiences.
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Henderson, Fiona, Steiner, Artur, Mazzei, Micaela, and Docherty, Catherine
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ATTITUDE (Psychology) , *COMPARATIVE studies , *CONCEPTUAL structures , *CONSUMER attitudes , *EMPLOYEE attitudes , *GROUP identity , *HEALTH , *HEALTH status indicators , *INTERVIEWING , *RESEARCH methodology , *PUBLIC welfare , *RESEARCH funding , *VOLUNTEER service , *QUALITATIVE research , *SOCIAL support , *THEMATIC analysis , *CAREGIVER attitudes , *DATA analysis software , *HEALTH & social status , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *MIDDLE age , *OLD age - Abstract
The global aging demographic is putting pressure on state-delivered health and social care services. As the austerity agenda in the UK cuts state-funded service provision for older people despite increasing demand, social enterprise has become a politically and economically attractive model for the sustainable delivery of some public services. Yet little is known about the impact of social enterprise on the health and wellbeing of older people. In this paper we address this gap in understanding and consider social enterprise activities as complex public health-promoting interventions. Our study aimed to understand what impact social enterprise activities had on the health and wellbeing of participants aged over 50, and also how that impact was created. To achieve this, we conducted qualitative semi-structured interviews with a sample (n = 43) of staff, volunteers, clients and carers aged over 50 who were involved in activities delivered by three social enterprises. Using a thematic analysis to explore manifest and latent themes, two antecedents of subjective younger age emerged explaining how benefit was created, namely downward social comparison and identity. The social enterprise activities we studied benefited participants' health and wellbeing, impacting positively on participants' sense of purpose, social support, connectedness and inclusion. These health and wellbeing benefits can be considered as outcomes of complex public health interventions for older people, and we relate these outcomes to beneficial conditions within the intermediary social determinants of health. We conclude by discussing the future impact of social enterprise activities and current UK policy on the structural determinants of health. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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11. "Everyday" Scottish and Finnish child protection work in an age of austerity: A practitioner perspective.
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Lohvansuu, Jenni and Emond, Ruth
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CHILD welfare , *COMPARATIVE studies , *EMPATHY , *FAMILIES , *INTERVIEWING , *RESEARCH methodology , *NATIONAL health services , *SOCIAL justice , *QUALITATIVE research , *THEMATIC analysis , *SOCIAL worker attitudes , *JOB involvement , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
This article examines the accounts given by child protection practitioners of how the current economic climate has impacted on their practice. We build our discussion on empirical findings emerging from a small but rigorous qualitative research project conducted by one of the authors. This original study examined Scottish and Finnish social workers' perceptions of their abilities to engage effectively with children and families in what many have described as an "age of austerity." It set out to explore challenges encountered in daily practice through a cross‐national comparative thematic analysis. The paper illuminates practitioners' shared reality of frontline practice in Scottish and Finnish contexts. Despite differing socio‐political environments, participating practitioners found austerity measures to impact negatively on both their professional resources and on the communities they work with. Significantly, practitioners regarded themselves as the key resource, taking individual responsibility to ensure families received a quality service. For many, austerity had resulted in greater empathy for families and awareness of the wider economic and structural impact on their lives. The increased centrality of social justice was pivotal to everyday practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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12. Conceptualising the public health role of actors operating outside of formal health systems: The case of social enterprise.
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Roy, Michael J., Baker, Rachel, and Kerr, Susan
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ATTRIBUTION (Social psychology) , *FOCUS groups , *INTERVIEWING , *RESEARCH methodology , *PUBLIC health , *QUALITATIVE research , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors - Abstract
This paper focuses on the role of actors that operate outside formal health systems, but nevertheless have a vital, if often under-recognised, role in supporting public health. The specific example used is the ‘social enterprise’, an organisation that seeks, through trading, to maximise social returns, rather than the distribution of profits to shareholders or owners. In this paper we advance empirical and theoretical understanding of the causal pathways at work in social enterprises, by considering them as a particularly complex form of public health ‘intervention’. Data were generated through qualitative, in depth, semi-structured interviews and a focus group discussion, with a purposive, maximum variation sample of social enterprise practitioners (n = 13) in an urban setting in the west of Scotland. A method of analysis inspired by critical realism – Causation Coding – enabled the identification of a range of explanatory mechanisms and potential pathways of causation between engagement in social enterprise-led activity and various outcomes, which have been grouped into physical health, mental health and social determinants. The findings then informed the construction of an empirically-informed conceptual model to act as a platform upon which to develop a future research agenda. The results of this work are considered to not only encourage a broader and more imaginative consideration of what actually constitutes a public health intervention, but also reinforces arguments that actors within the Third Sector have an important role to play in addressing contemporary and future public health challenges. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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13. 'Sticking to carpets' - assessment and judgement in health visiting practice in an era of risk: a qualitative study.
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King, Caroline
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BUSINESS networks , *COMMUNITY health nursing , *EMOTIONS , *FAMILY assessment , *INTERVIEWING , *JUDGMENT (Psychology) , *RESEARCH methodology , *HEALTH policy , *NEEDS assessment , *NURSING assessment , *RESEARCH funding , *SOCIAL stigma , *QUALITATIVE research , *JUDGMENT sampling , *HOME environment , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *THEMATIC analysis - Abstract
Aim and objective This paper aims to explore health visitors' accounts of assessment and judgement in health visiting in the context of policy change and an increased focus on risk, which is reshaping practice. Background Assessment and judgement underpin the targeting of support in health visiting practice. Existing literature suggests that needs assessment in health visiting is a complex process which draws on different types of knowledge. Methods The study, upon which this paper draws, was a qualitative exploration which aimed to explore the impact of policy change on health visiting practice and on families. The accounts of sixteen health visitors, who took part in semi-structured interviews, are reported. The interview data were analysed using thematic and narrative techniques. Results Health visitors' accounts of their observations of families' homes, relationships and practices, such as their references to 'dirt', harmful practices and appropriateness, illustrate ways in which assessment and judgement in health visiting practice are shaped by a discourse of risk and notions of ideal parenting. Health visitors problematise this discourse in relation to the potential stigmatising impacts for families. Although health visitors indicate ambivalence towards the use of assessment tools, the findings indicate that they feel the tools provide them with a safety-net at a time when their practice is being reshaped by a discourse of risk. Conclusion This paper identifies that assessment and judgement in contemporary health visiting are shaped by a discourse of risk. A discussion of the role of 'emotion in use' and collective emotions provides an appropriate theoretical lens to consider the impact that risk discourse has on health visiting practice and on families. Relevance to clinical practice This study highlights the need for assessment and judgement in health visiting practice to be highly reflexive, to support families in an era of risk. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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14. Factors associated with alcohol reduction in harmful and hazardous drinkers following alcohol brief intervention in Scotland: a qualitative enquiry.
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McQueen, Jean M., Ballinger, Claire, and Howe, Tracey E.
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ALCOHOL drinking , *PEOPLE with alcoholism , *MOTIVATIONAL interviewing , *COST effectiveness , *ALCOHOLISM , *HEALTH , *PREVENTION of alcoholism , *PSYCHOLOGY of alcoholism , *COMPARATIVE studies , *ECONOMIC aspects of diseases , *DRINKING behavior , *HEALTH attitudes , *HOSPITAL care , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *RESEARCH , *RESEARCH funding , *DISEASE relapse , *QUALITATIVE research , *EVALUATION research , *ECONOMICS ,ALCOHOL drinking prevention - Abstract
Background: Alcohol Brief Intervention (ABI) uses a motivational counselling approach to support individuals to reduce excessive alcohol consumption. There is growing evidence on ABI's use within various health care settings, although how they work and which components enhance success is largely unknown. This paper reports on the qualitative part of a mixed methods study. It explores enablers and barriers associated with alcohol reduction following an ABI. It focuses on alcohol's place within participants' lives and their personal perspectives on reducing consumption. There are a number of randomised controlled trials in this field though few ABI studies have addressed the experiences of hazardous/harmful drinkers. This study examines factors associated with alcohol reduction in harmful/hazardous drinkers following ABI.Methods: This qualitative study was underpinned by a realist evaluation approach and involved semi-structured interviews with ten harmful or hazardous alcohol drinkers. Participants (n = 10) were from the intervention arm of a randomised controlled trial (n = 124). All had received ABI, a 20 min motivational counselling interview, six months previously, and had reduced their alcohol consumption. Interviews were recorded, transcribed verbatim and thematically analysed.Results: Participants described their views on alcohol, its' place in their lives, their personal perspectives on reducing their consumption and future aspirations.Conclusions: The findings provide an insight into participants' views on alcohol, ABI, and the barriers and enablers to change. Participants described a cost benefit analysis, with some conscious consideration of the advantages and disadvantages of reducing intake or abstaining from alcohol. Findings suggest that, whilst hospital admission can act as a catalyst, encouraging individuals to reflect on their alcohol consumption through ABI may consolidate this, turning this reflective moment into action. Sustainability may be enhanced by the presence of a 'significant other' who encourages and experiences benefit. In addition having a purpose or structure with activities linked to employment and/or social and leisure pursuits offers the potential to enhance and sustain reduced alcohol consumption.Trial Registration: Trial registration number TRN NCT00982306 September 22nd 2009. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
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15. The right to the unhealthy deprived city: An exploration into the impacts of state-led redevelopment projects on the determinants of mental health.
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O'Neill, Ella, Cole, Helen V.S., García-Lamarca, Melissa, Anguelovski, Isabelle, Gullón, Pedro, and Triguero-Mas, Margarita
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EVALUATION of medical care , *HUMAN rights , *HEALTH services accessibility , *SOCIAL determinants of health , *RESEARCH methodology , *MENTAL health , *INTERVIEWING , *SOCIAL context , *QUALITATIVE research , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *HEALTH equity , *RESIDENTIAL patterns - Abstract
Research shows mental health is impacted by poor-quality physical and social-environmental conditions. Subsequently state-led redevelopment/regeneration schemes focus on improving the physical environment, to provide better social-environmental conditions, addressing spatial and socioeconomic inequities thus improving residents' health. However, recent research suggests that redevelopment/regeneration schemes often trigger gentrification, resulting in new spatial and socioeconomic inequalities that may worsen health outcomes, including mental health, for long-term neighborhood residents. Using the right to the city and situating this within the framework of accumulation by dispossession and capitalist hegemony, this paper explores the potential mechanisms in which poor mental health outcomes may endure in neighborhoods despite the implementation of redevelopment/regeneration projects. To do so, we explored two neighborhoods in the city of Glasgow — North Glasgow and East End – and conducted a strong qualitative study based on 25 in-depth semi-structured interviews with key stakeholders. The results show that postindustrial vacant and derelict land spaces and socioeconomic deprivation in North and East Glasgow are potential mechanisms contributing to the poor mental health of its residents. Where redevelopment/regeneration projects prioritize economic goals, it is often at the expense of social(health) outcomes. Instead, economic investment instigates processes of gentrification, where long-term neighborhood residents are excluded from accessing collective urban life and its (health) benefits. Moreover, these residents are continually excluded from participation in decision-making and are unable to shape the urban environment. In summary, we found a number of potential mechanisms that may contribute to enduring poor mental health outcomes despite the existence of redevelopment/regeneration projects. Projects instead have negative consequences for the determinants of mental health, reinforcing existing inequalities, disempowering original long-term neighborhood residents and only providing the "right" to the unhealthy deprived city. We define this as the impossibility to benefit from material opportunities, public spaces, goods and services and the inability to shape city transformations. • Post-industrial poor-quality spaces have negative impacts on some determinants of mental health. • Redevelopment projects prioritize economic goals at the expense of social/health. • Redevelopment projects initiates gentrification, excluding long-term residents from benefits. • Lower-class residents are excluded from participation in decision-making. • Redevelopment disempowers residents providing right to the unhealthy deprived city. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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16. The Context of Risk Management in Mental Health Social Work.
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Nolan, Deborah and Quinn, Neil
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INTERVIEWING , *RESEARCH methodology , *RISK management in business , *SOCIAL services , *QUALITATIVE research , *PROFESSIONAL practice , *JUDGMENT sampling , *MENTAL health services administration - Abstract
Managing risk is a key component of mental health social work practice, with the literature detailing two unique approaches to risk management — the dominant risk minimisation strategies and the less favoured risk-taking approaches. Due to a lack of research it is unclear, however, whether this is a practice reality, how professionals reconcile the tension between the two approaches and practice dilemmas, and the impact of wider factors perceived to influence these decisions. This paper aims to address these questions by drawing on 2010 research that undertook qualitative semi-structured interviews with seven Mental Health Officers in a Scottish local authority. Whilst the study found risk was generally constructed as relating to harm and danger, in practice a more measured approach to risk management was identified, with both approaches being employed, and a new acceptance of risk as potentially positive by organisations and practitioners was recognised. Participants illustrated how decisions are reached, without feeling inhibited by the ‘blame culture’, but clarified that this involved dilemmas and was a fraught area of practice. The paper concludes that more scope for positive risk-taking is desirable and requires the support of the policy context, legislation and organisations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2012
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17. The assessment and management of pain in patients with dementia in hospital settings: a multi-case exploratory study from a decision making perspective.
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Lichtner, Valentina, Dowding, Dawn, Allcock, Nick, Keady, John, Sampson, Elizabeth L., Briggs, Michelle, Corbett, Anne, James, Kirstin, Lasrado, Reena, Swarbrick, Caroline, and Closs, S. José
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PAIN management , *DEMENTIA patients , *MEDICAL decision making , *THEMATIC analysis , *HOSPITAL personnel , *TREATMENT of dementia , *MEDICAL care standards , *CAREGIVERS , *COMMUNICATION , *COMPARATIVE studies , *DEMENTIA , *HOSPITAL care , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *PAIN , *RESEARCH , *QUALITATIVE research , *EVALUATION research , *DISEASE complications - Abstract
Background: Pain is often poorly managed in people who have a dementia. Little is known about how this patient population is managed in hospital, with research to date focused mainly on care homes. This study aimed to investigate how pain is recognised, assessed and managed in patients with dementia in a range of acute hospital wards, to inform the development of a decision support tool to improve pain management for this group.Methods: A qualitative, multi-site exploratory case study. Data were collected in four hospitals in England and Scotland. Methods included non-participant observations, audits of patient records, semi-structured interviews with staff and carers, and analysis of hospital ward documents. Thematic analysis was performed through the lens of decision making theory.Results: Staff generally relied on patients' self-report of pain. For patients with dementia, however, communication difficulties experienced because of their condition, the organisational context, and time frames of staff interactions, hindered patients' ability to provide staff with information about their pain experience. This potentially undermined the trials of medications used to provide pain relief to each patient and assessments of their responses to these treatments. Furthermore, given the multidisciplinary environment, a patient's communication about their pain involved several members of staff, each having to make sense of the patient's pain as in an 'overall picture'. Information about patients' pain, elicited in different ways, at different times and by different health care staff, was fragmented in paper-based documentation. Re-assembling the pieces to form a 'patient specific picture of the pain' required collective staff memory, 'mental computation' and time.Conclusions: There is a need for an efficient method of eliciting and centralizing all pain-related information for patients with dementia, which is distributed in time and between personnel. Such a method should give an overall picture of a patient's pain which is rapidly accessible to all involved in their care. This would provide a much-needed basis for making decisions to support the effective management of the pain of older people with dementia in hospital. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
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18. A qualitative study of the relationship between the Scottish Medicines Consortium and their clinical experts.
- Author
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Newham, Rosemary, Corcoran, Emma Dunlop, Dear, James W., Hems, Sharon, McTaggart, Stuart, and Bennie, Marion
- Subjects
- *
DRUG therapy , *CONSORTIA , *CLINICAL drug trials , *INTERVIEWING , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL personnel , *MOTIVATION (Psychology) , *STATISTICAL sampling , *QUALITATIVE research , *JUDGMENT sampling , *OCCUPATIONAL roles , *THEMATIC analysis - Abstract
Rationale, aims and objectives Internationally, health technology assessments ( HTAs) are ubiquitous drivers to health policy. Within Scotland, the Scottish Medicines Consortium undertakes the medicine review process. Input from clinical experts, involved in frontline care, is an integral component of the assessment process. This paper explores the relationship between the clinical experts and the HTA agency within Scotland to better understand what motivates expert clinicians to devote their time to the medicine review process with no remuneration. Methods Twenty-seven clinical experts from 16 different clinical specialties took part in one-to-one interviews at their place of work between October 2011 and March 2012. Data analysis was inductive and comprised the organization of data into a framework and a subsequent thematic analysis. Results Three distinct themes were identified: (1) recruitment, which identified two types of explanations for the experts' appointment: external justification (nominated by another) and internal justification (being recognized as an expert); (2) flexibility of the procedures, with experts able to determine their own response style and negotiate timelines; (3) health care systems, demonstrating that their affiliation to the health system underpinned the relationship and their motivation to be clinical experts. Conclusions The findings of this study provide insight into the elements important to clinicians who voluntarily contribute to HTA processes. Examination of these elements in the context of the organizational citizenship behavior literature provides a foundation on which to improve understanding of this relationship and sustain and improve clinical expert participation in an increasingly intensified clinical environment and within cash-limited HTA systems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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19. Call of duty: an exploration of the factors influencing NHS professionals to report adult protection concerns.
- Author
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Fennell, Kate
- Subjects
- *
NURSING psychology , *SAFETY , *INTERVIEWING , *LEARNING disabilities , *RESEARCH methodology , *NATIONAL health services , *PATIENT safety , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *RESEARCH , *TRUST , *QUALITATIVE research , *LITERATURE reviews , *ADULTS , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Purpose – The Adult Support and Protection (Scotland) Act 2007 places a duty on Councils to investigate the circumstances of adults who, because of a disability, health condition or illness are unable to safeguard themselves from harm. Public partner agencies, including the NHS have a statutory obligation to bring to the attention of the Council those individuals who may be at risk of harm. Health professionals cooperate with adult protection investigations and participate in the development of adult support and protection plans, yet do not appear to be initiating adult protection referrals with the Council. Low reporting by health has also been recognised as a national issue. The purpose of this paper is to explore what promotes and what prohibits the identification and reporting of situations of abuse within the Scottish Legislative Framework. Understanding the decision-making processes of prospective reporters would potentially allow the barriers to be reduced and the supports to be strengthened. Design/methodology/approach – The research strategy is based on a literature review, a web-based survey and semi-structured interviews with health professionals within community learning and community mental health teams. Findings – The findings point to a number of inter-related factors which impinge upon the professional’s confidence to initiate adult protection referrals. Workers must first recognise harm as conduct which needs to be reported and addressed. They need to be familiar with referral procedures and be assured that their concerns will be dealt with appropriately. Health professionals are more likely to report if they are based in an environment which supports honest and open discussion regarding harm, without over-concern about agency reputation or resources. Access to multi-disciplinary consultation and support, particularly in relation to more ambiguous protection situations, was viewed as fundamental to reporting. Originality/value – This small scale study adds to a developing bank of literature providing a Scottish perspective on protecting adults. It offers some insight into reporting decisions from the viewpoint of community health professionals. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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20. Accessing and engaging women from socio-economically disadvantaged areas: a participatory approach to the design of a public health intervention for delivery in a Bingo club.
- Author
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Evans, Josie M. M., Ryde, Gemma, Jepson, Ruth, Gray, Cindy, Shepherd, Ashley, Mackison, Dionne, Ireland, Aileen V., McMurdo, Marion E. T., and Williams, Brian
- Subjects
- *
SOCIOECONOMICS , *PUBLIC health , *BINGO , *PHYSICAL activity , *PILOT projects , *SOCIAL participation , *POVERTY areas , *COMPARATIVE studies , *EXERCISE , *FOCUS groups , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL care , *MEDICAL cooperation , *MEDICAL protocols , *MOTIVATION (Psychology) , *RESEARCH , *RESEARCH funding , *QUALITATIVE research , *EVALUATION research , *AT-risk people , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Background: Our aim was to use participatory methods to investigate the feasibility and acceptability of using Bingo clubs for the design and delivery of an evidence-based physical activity and/or healthy eating intervention to socio-economically disadvantaged women. This paper describes the participatory process that has resulted in a physical activity intervention for women aged >55 years, ready for pilot-testing in a Bingo club setting.Methods: Studies using different quantitative and qualitative approaches were conducted among customers and staff of a Bingo club in a city of 85,000 inhabitants in central Scotland. These were designed to take the views of different stakeholders into account, with a view to enhancing uptake, engagement and effectiveness with any proposed intervention.Results: Sixteen relevant studies were identified in a literature review that generated ideas for intervention components. A questionnaire completed by 151 women in the Bingo club showed that almost half (47 %) aged >55 years were not meeting physical activity guidelines; evidence backed up by accelerometer data from 29 women. Discussions in six focus groups attended by 27 club members revealed different but overlapping motivations for attending the Bingo club (social benefits) and playing Bingo (cognitive benefits). There was some scepticism as to whether the Bingo club was an appropriate setting for an intervention, and a dietary intervention was not favoured. It was clear that any planned intervention needed to utilise the social motivation and habitual nature of attendance at the Bingo club, without taking women away from Bingo games. These results were taken forward to a 5-h long participative workshop with 27 stakeholders (including 19 Bingo players). Intervention design (form and content) was then finalised during two round table research team meetings.Conclusions: It was possible to access and engage with women living in areas of socio-economic disadvantage through a Bingo club setting. A physical activity intervention for women >55 years is realistic for recruitment, will address the needs of potential recipients in the Bingo club, appears to be feasible and acceptable to club members and staff, and has been designed with their input. A pilot study is underway, investigating recruitment, retention and feasibility of delivery. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
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21. Hearing voices: re/presenting the findings of narrative research into patient experience as poems.
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Stenhouse, R.
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- *
DISCOURSE analysis , *DOCUMENTATION , *AUDITORY hallucinations , *HEALTH facilities , *INTERVIEWING , *RESEARCH methodology , *PATIENT-professional relations , *METROPOLITAN areas , *POWER (Social sciences) , *PSYCHIATRIC hospitals , *RURAL conditions , *QUALITATIVE research , *LABELING theory , *NARRATIVES , *SOCIAL context , *PATIENT-centered care , *PATIENTS' attitudes - Abstract
Accessible summary Research into the patient's perspective on their care is being given increasing importance within health and nurse education policy, predicated upon the idea that the findings represent the patient experience., Researchers have power to silence the voices of research participants through the process of authorship. Exploring the arts as a means of presenting findings offers the opportunity problematize issues of power and authorship, and examine ways of decentring the researcher's voice., Re/presentation of patient experience in poetic form encourages readers to engage with that experience as they have to actively interpret the meaning of the poem., Researchers interested in examining and conveying the experience of others should be encouraged to problematize issues of authorship and consider the impact of their authority on the re/presentation of the experience of the other., Abstract The study aimed to understand the experience of being a patient on an acute psychiatric inpatient ward. A further aim was to open up spaces for the voices of participants to be heard. Contemporary government policy places patient experience at the centre of healthcare policy and service development. Despite this, those who occupy marginalized discourses struggle to be heard within the dominant discourse of health care. A qualitative approach was used, and narrative was conceptualized as representing experience. Sociolinguistic theories informed the development of the analytic framework treating meaning as contextual and arising from both content and structure of narratives. Concepts of representation, voice and authorship were problematized. Thirteen people who had been inpatients on an acute psychiatric inpatient ward participated. Narrative data were gathered using unstructured interviews. The data were analysed holistically using a method that attended to both the structure and content of the narrative. The product of these holistic narratives was the development of a poem representing each participant's experience. This paper focuses on the development of these poems as a method of decentring the authorial voice and opening up spaces for the voices of the participants to be heard. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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22. Understanding "revolving door" patients in general practice: a qualitative study.
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Williamson, Andrea E., Mullen, Kenneth, and Wilson, Philip
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FAMILY medicine , *GROUNDED theory , *INTERVIEWING , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL personnel , *PATIENT compliance , *QUALITATIVE research , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Background 'Revolving door' patients in general practice are repeatedly removed from general practitioners' (GP) lists. This paper reports a qualitative portion of the first mixed methods study of these marginalised patients. Methods We conducted qualitative semi-structured interviews with six practitioner services staff and six GPs in Scotland, utilizing Charmazian grounded theory to characterise 'revolving door' patients and their impact from professionals' perspectives. Results 'Revolving door' patients were reported as having three necessary characteristics; they had unreasonable expectations, exhibited inappropriate behaviours and had unmet health needs. A range of boundary breaches were reported too when 'revolving door' patients interacted with NHS staff. Conclusions We utilise the 'sensitising concepts' of legitimacy by drawing on literature about 'good and bad' patients and 'dirty work designations.' We relate these to the core work of general practice and explore the role that medical and moral schemas have in how health service professionals understand and work with 'revolving door' patients. We suggest this may have wider relevance for the problem doctor patient relationship literature. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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23. Active agents of health promotion? The school's role in supporting the HPV vaccination programme.
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Spratt, Jennifer, Shucksmith, Janet, Philip, Kate, and McNaughton, Rebekah
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- *
HEALTH promotion , *FOCUS groups , *HEALTH education , *INTERVIEWING , *RESEARCH methodology , *HEALTH policy , *SOUND recordings , *HUMAN papillomavirus vaccines , *QUALITATIVE research , *JUDGMENT sampling , *OCCUPATIONAL roles , *THEMATIC analysis , *COLLEGE teacher attitudes - Abstract
By providing a place in which children can be accessed, the school has long been a site for population-level health initiatives. Recent policy shifts towards health-promoting schools have however re-cast the school from passive host to active collaborator in public health. This paper examines secondary school teachers' views of their roles as partners in Scotland's human papilloma virus vaccination programme. Focus groups were held in seven schools across Scotland. Confusion was evident in relation to this role, with competing understandings of young women's sexuality, concerns about parental perceptions and uncertainty about professional responsibilities. Many teachers sought to distance themselves from the vaccination programme. Evidence was found of a ‘sedimentation of discourses’, as mass models of state-sanctioned health intervention persist alongside contemporary discourses of individual choice. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2013
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24. What difference does the Adult Support and Protection (Scotland) 2007 make to social work service practitioners' safeguarding practice?
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Mackay, Kathryn, Notman, Mary, Mcnicholl, Justin, Fraser, Diane, Mclaughlan, Claire, and Rossi, Sylvia
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- *
PATIENT abuse , *LEGAL compliance , *INTERVIEWING , *JOB descriptions , *RESEARCH methodology , *PROFESSIONS , *QUALITATIVE research , *JUDGMENT sampling , *CLIENT relations , *INVOLUNTARY hospitalization , *DATA analysis software , *SOCIAL worker attitudes , *LAW - Abstract
Purpose -- This article seeks to explore the difference that adult support and protection legislation may have made to work with adults at risk of harm in Scotland. Design/methodology/approach -- The article is based upon findings of a joint academic and practitioner qualitative research project that interviewed 29 social service practitioners across three local authorities. Findings -- The legislation was seen as positive, giving greater attention to adults at risk. Views about the actual difference it made to the practitioners' practice varied, and were more likely in new rather than ongoing work. Three differences were noted: duties of investigation, protection orders and improved shared responsibility within the local authority and across other agencies, but to a lesser extent NHS staff. Overall it gave effective responses, more quickly for the adults at risk. Whilst the law brought greater clarity of role, there were tensions for practitioners in balancing an adult's right to autonomy with practitioners' safeguarding responsibilities. Originality/value -- The paper demonstrates that a dedicated law can improve safeguarding practice by clarifying the role of social work practitioners and the responsibilities of other agencies. The right to request access to records and banning orders were seen as valuable new measures in safeguarding adults at risk. As such the study from the first UK country to use dedicated adult safeguarding law offers a valuable insight for policy makers, professionals and campaign groups from other countries, which might be considering similar action. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
25. Memorialisation and the metaphor of final journeys: workers’ experiences of dealing with death within care homes for the elderly.
- Author
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Dempster, PaulG.
- Subjects
- *
DEATH & psychology , *PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation , *CORPORATE culture , *GROUNDED theory , *INTERVIEWING , *RESEARCH methodology , *PATIENT-professional relations , *SOUND recordings , *QUALITATIVE research , *NURSING home employees , *SPIRITUAL care (Medical care) , *OLD age , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Drawing on the literature of metaphor, movement and memorialisation, this paper focuses on the ‘final journey’, a metaphoric journey undertaken by dead residents which allowed workers in care homes for older people to cope with the amounts of death that they encountered working in care homes for the elderly. Movement plays a key role in the routine functioning of the home and the metaphoric language of a journey is an important conclusion to the stages that have preceded this. It helps explain the care that surrounds death and dying within the care home. Workers’ experiences show that there is a rich oral tradition which symbolism, spirituality, ritual and memorial language explain and at the same time creates continuity for workers within care homes. I argue that the search for meaning is important for staff as they continually face the deterioration of people during their working lives. Further, the use of a metaphorical journey is a practical device for remembering and is imbued with the caring culture of the home and the individual beliefs of the workers involved. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2012
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26. What business are we in? Value added services, core business and national library performance.
- Author
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Broady-Preston, Judith and Swain, Wendy
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- *
LIBRARY public services , *GOVERNMENT agencies , *CONSUMER attitudes , *CORPORATE culture , *EXECUTIVES , *FOCUS groups , *INTERVIEWING , *RESEARCH methodology , *SCIENTIFIC observation , *PUBLIC libraries , *QUALITY assurance , *STRATEGIC planning , *QUALITATIVE research , *JUDGMENT sampling , *THEMATIC analysis , *ORGANIZATIONAL goals - Abstract
Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to report results of a research project which investigated how two UK National libraries categorise their core business purpose together with an assessment of the role and relevance of additional (or value-added) services in their strategic thinking, future planning and performance measurement. Design/methodology/approach – This is a qualitative interpretive study, using a collective case study methodology, with the National Libraries of Wales and Scotland as the core cases. Semi-structured interviews were conducted with senior managers in both institutions, together with focus groups with librarians and library assistants, selected using purposive sampling. All instruments were piloted; data from the respondents were recorded, coded, classified and cross-checked to ensure validity and rigour, using themed interview schedules to facilitate analysis. Findings – It is difficult to be definitive as to core and additional services as individuals have differing interpretations of the terms. Changing customer demands and expectations, technological developments and the impact of a dynamic and complex economic environment suggest it is more meaningful to reconceptualise services according to the extent to which they contribute to achieving basic business purpose at any one time. Originality/value – Libraries must demonstrate efficiency and effectiveness in service provision, and in relation to achieving primary purpose and resource priorities in order to survive. Examining the relevance of defining and distinguishing core and added-value services in relation to performance assessment and strategic vision addresses a gap in existing knowledge. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
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27. Managing change in the care of children with complex needs: healthcare providers' perspectives.
- Author
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Law, James, McCann, Dolly, and O'May, Fiona
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ALLIED health personnel , *CHRONIC diseases in children , *COMMUNICATION , *COMMUNITY health nursing , *FAMILY medicine , *FOCUS groups , *HEALTH care rationing , *HEALTH care teams , *HEALTH services accessibility , *HOME care services , *INFORMATION storage & retrieval systems , *MEDICAL databases , *INTERPROFESSIONAL relations , *INTERVIEWING , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL care , *MEDICAL needs assessment , *MEDICAL personnel , *MEDICAL referrals , *PEDIATRIC nursing , *PEDIATRICS , *PERSONNEL management , *RESEARCH funding , *SCHOOL nursing , *QUALITATIVE research , *JUDGMENT sampling , *OCCUPATIONAL roles , *THEMATIC analysis , *PATIENTS' families ,RESEARCH evaluation - Abstract
law j., mccann d. & o'may f. (2011) Managing change in the care of children with complex needs: healthcare providers' perspectives. Journal of Advanced Nursing 67(12), 2551-2560. Abstract Aim. This paper is a report of a descriptive qualitative study of the role and activities of nursing and allied health professionals caring for children with complex needs in a community setting. Background. Health care is changing in terms of service provision and delivery, with an increased focus on person-centred care, prevention and community-based services. The role of nursing and allied health professionals is central to these changes but is not well described in terms of capacity, or the knowledge and skills required to meet increasing demand. Method. Within four Health Boards, semi-structured telephone interviews were conducted in 2007 with three nursing and four allied health managers, followed by four focus groups with 15 nursing and 11 allied health practitioners; in addition, three nurses and one speech therapist were interviewed by telephone. Results. Respondents identified challenges related to communication and information systems, equity of service provision, family-centred care and partnership working. Generic and specialized knowledge and skills are needed, although providing the right skills in the right place can often prove problematic with potential implications for service provision. Conclusion. Findings support the adoption of integrated partnership working, going beyond the identification of key professionals, to developing a set of criteria against which future service provision could be judged. Research priorities were identified; comparative evaluation of services, better understanding of the transition process and a clearer sense of the individual's response to the increasing customization of services. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
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28. What difference does counselling make? - The perceptions of drug-using clients on low incomes.
- Author
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Edwards, Jane and Loeb, Sarah
- Subjects
- *
TREATMENT of post-traumatic stress disorder , *ATTITUDE (Psychology) , *CHANGE , *COUNSELING , *GROUNDED theory , *INTERVIEWING , *RESEARCH methodology , *PATIENT-professional relations , *HEALTH outcome assessment , *PATIENTS , *POVERTY , *SOCIAL stigma , *SUBSTANCE abuse , *QUALITATIVE research , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *TREATMENT effectiveness - Abstract
Context: This paper reports on a qualitative study looking at the perceptions of clients who use drugs and are on low income. Research suggests that counselling services can experience difficulties in reaching and retaining such clients, and outcomes of counselling can be disappointing. Aim: To learn from clients who had engaged in counselling for over six months what difference it had made to their lives. Method: Grounded theory methodology was used to analyse semi-structured interviews with six participants. Findings: Findings included changes in the clients' internal world, their connectedness with society, their familiarity with counselling, and their perception of the relationship with the counsellor. Factors within the counselling process which helped and hindered change were identified. The study documents how participants were able to use counselling to improve their lives. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
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29. 'They all said you could come and speak to us': patients' expectations and experiences of help on an acute psychiatric inpatient ward.
- Author
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STENHOUSE, R. C.
- Subjects
- *
INTERVIEWING , *RESEARCH methodology , *NURSE-patient relationships , *PATIENT satisfaction , *PSYCHIATRIC hospitals , *PSYCHIATRIC nursing , *QUALITATIVE research , *SAMPLE size (Statistics) , *NARRATIVES , *PSYCHIATRIC treatment - Abstract
Acute psychiatric inpatient care forms an integral part of mental health services. Few studies have focussed on the patient experience of acute care. Research into patient experience is increasingly important to policy and service development processes. Knowledge of patient experiences facilitates the development of nursing practice. The aim of the study was to gain insight into the experience of being a patient on an acute inpatient psychiatric ward. Thirteen participants were recruited from the acute ward. Unstructured interviews were used to gather narrative data of their experiences. Holistic analysis of the narratives was informed by Gee's socio-linguistic theories that meaning is linked to narrative structure. Reading of the holistic analyses yielded themes of help, safety and power running across the participants' experiences. The patient experience was characterized by dissonance between expectation and experience, the search for a nurse--patient relationship and the development of strategies to cope with being on the acute ward. This paper focuses on the theme of 'Help' where participants describe their expectation that they will receive help through the development of relationships with the nurses, and their experience of the barriers to this. In response, participants developed strategies to support each other. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
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30. Attracting healthcare professionals to remote and rural medicine: Learning from doctors in training in the north of Scotland.
- Author
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Cleland, J., Johnston, P.W., Walker, L., and Needham, G.
- Subjects
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ABILITY , *CONCEPTUAL structures , *FOCUS groups , *HOSPITAL medical staff , *INTERVIEWING , *LABOR demand , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICALLY underserved areas , *POPULATION geography , *RESEARCH funding , *RESPONSIBILITY , *RURAL conditions , *SOCIAL isolation , *SOUND recordings , *VOCATIONAL guidance , *TRAINING , *QUALITATIVE research , *PROFESSIONAL practice , *JUDGMENT sampling , *SOCIAL learning theory , *THEMATIC analysis , *PHYSICIANS' attitudes ,STUDY & teaching of medicine - Abstract
Background: Research exploring the experiences of trainee doctors in remote and rural locations is scarce. Our aim was to gain an understanding of the experiences and perceptions of Foundation Programme (FP) doctors training in placements in remote and rural areas of the north of Scotland. Methods: FP doctors training in remote and rural areas in Scotland took part in a qualitative study (focus groups and individual interviews) exploring their training experiences and career plans. To make sense of a potential multitude of factors, we selected social cognitive careers theory (SCCT) to underpin data collection and analysis. Results: A total of 20 trainees participated. Using data-driven analysis, three themes relevant to the SCCT emerged. These are the educational experience (e.g., opportunities to develop skills, greater responsibility), geographical isolation factors (e.g., the impact of staff shortages, poor accommodation, travel) and personal factors (e.g., social isolation, attitudes towards the experience). Conclusion: Many factors impact on trainees' experience of learning and living in remote and rural medicine (R&R) environments. These experiences can be very positive for some individuals but factors external to the educational environment influence the perception of the overall experience. SCCT helps clarify the interaction between individual and contextual factors in career decision making. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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