2011
DOI: 10.1111/j.1468-3156.2011.00711.x
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‘Standing up for my human rights’: a group’s journey beyond consultation towards co‐production

Abstract: Accessible summary  Our health service ran a group to support people to stand up for their human rights.  People with learning disabilities have their own stories to tell about human rights.  Group members created a character called FREDA (fairness, respect, equality, dignity, autonomy) to understand how human rights laws affect their lives.  The group did not follow its original plan. The group shared their own knowledge and experiences with each other. Acting on what people in the group wanted was most impor… Show more

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Cited by 26 publications
(34 citation statements)
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“…Two service user groups were designed, developed and run by multidisciplinary professionals to support people with intellectual disabilities to stand up for their human rights (Roberts et al . ). The core focus of the groups was to develop a meaningful understanding of human rights, underpinned by the FREDA principles of Fairness, Respect, Equality, Dignity and Autonomy.…”
Section: Service User Involvement and Co‐productionmentioning
confidence: 97%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Two service user groups were designed, developed and run by multidisciplinary professionals to support people with intellectual disabilities to stand up for their human rights (Roberts et al . ). The core focus of the groups was to develop a meaningful understanding of human rights, underpinned by the FREDA principles of Fairness, Respect, Equality, Dignity and Autonomy.…”
Section: Service User Involvement and Co‐productionmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…As the group developed, service users began to challenge didactic teaching methods and make changes to the way in which the group ran (Roberts et al . ). This marked a shift towards more co‐produced group sessions and more meaningful shared outcomes for the individuals taking part.…”
Section: Service User Involvement and Co‐productionmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…If, as some researchers have suggested (Epstein, Farina, & Heidt, 2014;Race, Boxall, & Carson, 2005), the "voices" of people with disabilities and their families or informal primary carers were to become embedded within every aspect of disability service policy development, this might address the perceived "power advantage" of service providers. Instead of "us and them", co-production relationships would exist between the professionals providing services and the service users, which could transform the welfare system (Brown & Osborne, 2012;Duffy, 2010;Osborne, Radnor, & Nasi, 2013;Roberts, Greenhill, Talbot, & Cuzak, 2011). Policies facilitating greater choice and control by people with intellectual and developmental disabilities, together with a co-production approach, could influence a paradigm shift away from the perception that people with intellectual and developmental disabilities are "passive recipients of services and burdens on the system, into one where they are equal partners in designing and delivering services" (Boyle, Slay, & Stephens, 2010, p. 23).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…The FREDA principles have usefully been applied in other health-care settings, including with people living with an intellectual disability. 144 Defining the issues related to the systematic and subtle ways in which human rights can be threatened in dementia care is, of course, a useful endeavour, but if this information is not shared in a way that is accessible to many people it will not influence the treatment that people receive. The PPI group is currently working with filmmakers to produce a series of short films that will represent these principles and their interpretation in an engaging way.…”
Section: Patient and Public Involvementmentioning
confidence: 99%