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When co-design works (sort of): the case of the Australian elder abuse screening instrument

journal contribution
posted on 2023-02-20, 22:41 authored by Bianca Brijnath, Luke Gahan, Briony Dow, Lyndal Hickey, Lisa Braddy, Melinda Collins, Josefine Antoniades
Applying co-design methodologies is increasingly recommended for engaging diverse end-users and bridging evidence-practice gaps. Yet, one of the ongoing challenges for research using co-design is the lack of evidence as to whether co-design leads to better outcomes than not using co-design. In this article, we outline how, despite adhering to a time and resource intensive co-design process with strong moral and ethical foundations, its implementation by end-users led to mixed outcomes around improved elder abuse screening. We discuss the implications of these ambiguous results, arguing that "noise" in our data might be inevitable due to the inherent sensitivities associated with elder abuse screening and offer a polemical recommendation about why the Australian Elder Abuse Screening Instrument (AuSI) should nevertheless be rolled out.

History

Journal

JOURNAL OF ELDER ABUSE & NEGLECT

Volume

34

Pagination

302-313

Location

England

ISSN

0894-6566

eISSN

1540-4129

Language

English

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Issue

4

Publisher

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD