Involving older people in practice development work: An evaluation of an intermediate care service and practice

A shared vision driving a three year systematic practice development strategy within the intermediate care services of one primary care trust in England included an element of facilitating greater user involvement. This particular practice development work demonstrates how service users, in this case older people with intensive rehabilitation needs, were involved in the evaluation work. The evaluation work, comprising four methods (Patient Centreometer Questionnaire, Service Questionnaire, Focus Group and Patient/Carer Stories) was used to facilitate or enable multi-disciplinary practitioners in the practice development group actively to learn through a different form of engagement with older people outside of the usual ‘patient’ and ‘caregiver’ roles. The learning achieved from the process and the evidence obtained through the evaluation methods provided motivation, increased commitment and generated a practice development action plan that enabled changes in practice to be implemented based genuinely on users' experiences. This article also shows how this practice development work moved away from the notion of the baseline and comparative evaluation method to more of an ongoing and integrative method of evaluation. Copyright © 2006 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

[1]  T. Koch,et al.  Listening to the voices of older patients: an existential-phenomenological approach to quality assurance. , 2007, Journal of clinical nursing.

[2]  C. Hogg,et al.  Whose interests do lay people represent? Towards an understanding of the role of lay people as members of committees , 2001, Health expectations : an international journal of public participation in health care and health policy.

[3]  Maggie Mort,et al.  Which champions, which people? Public and user involvement in health care. , 1998 .

[4]  Patient participation requires a change of attitude in health care. , 2000, International journal of health care quality assurance incorporating Leadership in health services.

[5]  Jo Rycroft-Malone,et al.  Nursing Theory and Concept Development or Analysis Getting Evidence into Practice: the Meaning of 'context' , 2022 .

[6]  Julienne Meyer Lay participation in care: threat to the status quo , 1993 .

[7]  K. Manley,et al.  Nursing development unit: developing a new philosophy in the NDU. , 1990, Nursing standard (Royal College of Nursing (Great Britain) : 1987).

[8]  B. McCormack,et al.  Practice development: purpose, methodology, facilitation and evaluation. , 2003, Nursing in critical care.

[9]  K. Manley Organisational culture and consultant nurse outcomes: Part 1. Organisational culture. , 2000, Nursing standard (Royal College of Nursing (Great Britain) : 1987).

[10]  N. Small,et al.  Too Ill to Talk?: User Involvement in Palliative Care , 2001 .

[11]  V. Minichiello,et al.  The contribution of music to quality of life in older people: an Australian qualitative study , 2005, Ageing and Society.

[12]  D. Morgan Focus groups for qualitative research. , 1988, Hospital guest relations report.

[13]  Brendan McCormack,et al.  A concept analysis of practice development , 2002 .

[14]  E. Tutton Patient participation on a ward for frail older people. , 2005, Journal of advanced nursing.

[15]  M. Barnes The same old process? Older people, participation and deliberation , 2005, Ageing and Society.