2018
DOI: 10.1136/medhum-2017-011398
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The Participatory Zeitgeist: an explanatory theoretical model of change in an era of coproduction and codesign in healthcare improvement

Abstract: Healthcare systems redesign and service improvement approaches are adopting participatory tools, techniques and mindsets. Participatory methods increasingly used in healthcare improvement coalesce around the concept of coproduction, and related practices of cocreation, codesign and coinnovation. These participatory methods have become the new Zeitgeist-the spirit of our times in quality improvement. The rationale for this new spirit of participation relates to voice and engagement (those with lived experience … Show more

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Cited by 205 publications
(258 citation statements)
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“…This realist synthesis suggests a program theory to guide health‐care organizations when involving patients in improving health‐care quality; tailor patient involvement to various QI efforts and contexts, support interaction and partnership within each QI effort, and support behavioural changes that follow QI efforts involving patients—at all organizational levels. These findings may seem self‐evident; however, the gap between health‐care policy and practice remains, with barriers and uncertainty concerning how to best involve patients on different organizational levels . Patient involvement includes many aspects and issues, and the term is not clearly understood, by either patients or healthcare professionals .…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…This realist synthesis suggests a program theory to guide health‐care organizations when involving patients in improving health‐care quality; tailor patient involvement to various QI efforts and contexts, support interaction and partnership within each QI effort, and support behavioural changes that follow QI efforts involving patients—at all organizational levels. These findings may seem self‐evident; however, the gap between health‐care policy and practice remains, with barriers and uncertainty concerning how to best involve patients on different organizational levels . Patient involvement includes many aspects and issues, and the term is not clearly understood, by either patients or healthcare professionals .…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Thoughtful and proper evaluation and feedback is needed—for example by developing and monitoring patient‐centred outcomes and evaluating health‐care professionals’ motivation and well‐being. It is an on‐going pursuit of organizational behaviour change in the era of co‐production and co‐design . Further research in this area is warranted …”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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