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Coproduction in practice : participatory action research to develop a model of community aged care

journal contribution
posted on 2011-10-01, 00:00 authored by Goetz Ottmann, C Laragy, Jacqueline Allen, Peter Feldman
Coproduction has become synonymous with innovative approaches to public service delivery in European Union countries as well as in Australia. Coproduction has the potential to bring together individuals, communities, and organisations in a process to collaboratively develop new models and services which improve public services. Yet, Australian policy makers and practitioners who would like to deploy coproduction within the context of older adult social care can only draw on a handful of papers and reports that could guide implementation. This paper fills this gap by reporting on the implementation of a multi-stakeholder coproduction approach to the development of a consumer directed care model for older people with complex health issues. The paper describes and critically highlights methodological challenges encountered during the 12 month-long participatory action research phase of a larger project involving older people with complex care needs, their carers, and government and non-government stakeholders. The paper outlines key considerations regarding (1) the involvement of older people with complex needs, (2) collaboration with industry partners, (3) engagement of government representatives, and (4) reflects on implementing participatory research projects within a context of outsourcing and interlinked supply chains. While not all challenges encountered could be resolved, the coproduction approach was successful in bringing together a wide range of stakeholders with competing agendas in an iterative process geared to resolve a plethora of concerns raised by older people, carers and services providers. This paper provides an example for others seeking to use coproduction and participatory methods to provide person-centred care services for older people.

History

Journal

Systemic practice and action research

Volume

24

Issue

5

Pagination

413 - 427

Publisher

Springer

Location

New York, N.Y.

ISSN

1094-429X

eISSN

1573-9295

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2011, Springer Science+Business Media, LLC