Presentation by Dr Michelle Kehoe and Dr Rick Whitehead at Child & Adolescent Mental Health Conference
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Presentation by Dr Michelle Kehoe and Dr Rick Whitehead at Child & Adolescent Mental Health Conference
Co-design and co-production of health services incorporates the perspectives of both staff working within the system and individuals with lived experience of system. Ideally, co-design and co-production ensure the voices of people with lived experience are valued and are reflected in the choices made when designing and delivering services. In Australia, co-design and co-production of health services are becoming more commonplace, with some funding for services being dependent on the incorporation of co-design methodology. However, this process often needs to work within the constraints of a system which is bound by inflexible frameworks and practical need. These barriers can jeopardise an authentic co-design and co-production process which can result in a tokenistic, box-ticking exercise.
Using the personal experience of the authors, a focus of this presentation will be exploring the process and challenges involved with the co-design and co-production whilst working within the constraints of the health system. A further focus will be how the voices of lived experience can be utilised in the co-production of research and evaluation. As research is typically conducted by researchers using homogenised methods of interpretation and analysis, involving lived experience in the research process honours unique perspectives in how research is designed, and findings are analysed.
The experiences of the authors highlight the need for co-design and co-production to be an iterative circular process. Following the process of service development and implementation, the need for continued service improvement through co-designed research and evaluation can help to ‘close the loop’ and involve multiple perspectives at all stages.
Key learnings:
– How to create authentic co-design and co-production which honours the service user perspective
– what does co-produced research look like
– what are the challenges associated with implementing co-design and co-production in service design and evaluation
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Read moreThe ALIVE National Centre is funded by the NHMRC Special Initiative in Mental Health.
We acknowledge the Traditional Custodians of Country throughout Australia and recognise their continuing connection to land, waters and sky. We pay our respects to their Elders past, present and emerging. We are committed to working together to address the health inequalities within our Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities. The Uluru Statement from the Heart is a fundamental driver of our research, education program, and commitment to equity and access.
This map attempts to represent the language, social or nation groups of Aboriginal Australia. It shows only the general locations of larger groupings of people which may include clans, dialects or individual languages in a group. It used published resources from the eighteenth century-1994 and is not intended to be exact, nor the boundaries fixed. It is not suitable for native title or other land claims. David R Horton (creator), © AIATSIS, 1996. No reproduction without permission. To purchase a print version visit: https://shop.aiatsis.gov.au/
The ALIVE National Centre for Mental Health Research Translation is funded by the National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) Special Initiative in Mental Health Grant APP2002047.
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