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Understanding and using experiences of social care to guide service improvements: translating a co-design approach from health to social care

Authors :
Ryan, Sara
Maddison, Jane
Baxter, Kate
Wilberforce, Mark
Birks, Yvonne
Morrissey, Emmie
Martin, Angela
Lambat, Ahmed
Bebbington, Pam
Ziebland, Sue
Robson, Louise
Locock, Louise
Ryan, Sara
Maddison, Jane
Baxter, Kate
Wilberforce, Mark
Birks, Yvonne
Morrissey, Emmie
Martin, Angela
Lambat, Ahmed
Bebbington, Pam
Ziebland, Sue
Robson, Louise
Locock, Louise
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Background Local authorities need to find new ways of collecting and using data on social care users’ experiences to improve service design and quality. Here we draw on and adapt an approach used in the healthcare improvement field, accelerated experience-based co-design, to see if it can be translated to social care. We use loneliness support as our exemplar. Objectives To understand how loneliness is understood and experienced by members of the public and characterised by social care and voluntary sector staff; to identify service improvements around loneliness support; to explore whether accelerated experience-based co-design is effective in social care; and to produce new resources for publication on Socialcaretalk.org. Design and methods Discovery phase: in-depth interviews with a diverse sample of people in terms of demographic characteristics with experience of loneliness, and 20 social care and voluntary staff who provided loneliness support. Production of a catalyst film from the public interview data set. Co-design phase: exploring whether the accelerated experience-based co-design approach is effective in one local authority area via a series of three workshops to agree shared priorities for improving loneliness support (one workshop for staff, another for people with experience of local loneliness support, and a third, joint workshop), followed by 7-monthly meetings by two co-design groups to work on priority improvements. A process evaluation of the co-design phase was conducted using interviews, ethnographic observation, questionnaires and other written material. Results Accelerated experience-based co-design demonstrated strong potential for use in social care. Diverse experiences of participants and fuzzy boundaries around social care compared to health care widened the scope of what could be considered a service improvement priority. Co-design groups focused on supporting people to return to pre-pandemic activities and developing a vulnerable passen

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
text, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1457294378
Document Type :
Electronic Resource