Farmer Jane, Carlisle Karen, Dickson-Swift Virginia, Teasdale Simon, Kenny Amanda, Taylor Judy, Croker Felicity, Marini Karen, Gussy Mark
Social Innovation Research Institute, Swinburne University, John Street, Hawthorn, Melbourne, 3122, Australia.
College of Medicine & Dentistry, James Cook University, Townsville, QLD, 4811, Australia.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2018 Jan 31;18(1):68. doi: 10.1186/s12913-018-2852-0.
Citizen participation in health service co-production is increasingly enacted. A reason for engaging community members is to co-design services that are locally-appropriate and harness local assets. To date, much literature examines processes of involving participants, with little consideration of innovative services are designed, how innovations emerge, develop and whether they sustain or diffuse. This paper addresses this gap by examining co-designed initiatives through the lens of social innovation - a conceptualisation more attuned to analysing grassroots innovation than common health services research approaches considering top-down, technical innovations. This paper considers whether social innovation is a useful frame for examining co-designed services.
Eighty-eight volunteer community-based participants from six rural Australian communities were engaged using the same, tested co-design framework for a 12-month design and then 12-month implementation phase, in 24 workshops (2014-16). Mixed, qualitative data were collected and used to formulate five case studies of community co-designed innovations. A social innovation theory, derived from literature, was applied as an analytical frame to examine co-design cases at 3 stages: innovation growth, development and sustainability/diffusion.
Social innovation theory was found relevant in examining and understanding what occurred at each stage of innovation development. Innovations themselves were all adaptations of existing ideas. They emerged due to local participants combining knowledge from local context, own experiences and exemplars. External facilitation brought resources together. The project provided a protective niche in which pilot innovations developed, but they needed support from managers and/or policymakers to be implemented; and to be compatible with existing health system practices. For innovations to move to sustainability/diffusion required political relationships. Challenging existing practice without these was problematical.
Social innovation provides a useful lens to understand the grassroots innovation process implied in community participation in service co-design. It helps to show problems in co-design processes and highlights the need for strong partnerships and advocacy beyond the immediate community for new ideas to thrive. Regional commissioning organisations are intended to diffuse useful, co-designed service innovations. Efforts are required to develop an innovation system to realise the potential of community involvement in co-design.
公民参与卫生服务共同生产的情况日益普遍。让社区成员参与的一个原因是共同设计适合当地情况并利用当地资源的服务。迄今为止,许多文献研究了让参与者参与的过程,却很少考虑所设计的创新服务、创新如何产生和发展,以及它们是否能够持续或传播。本文通过从社会创新的角度审视共同设计的举措来填补这一空白——与考虑自上而下的技术创新的常见卫生服务研究方法相比,社会创新这一概念更适合分析基层创新。本文探讨社会创新是否是审视共同设计服务的有用框架。
来自澳大利亚六个农村社区的88名基于社区的志愿者参与者,在2014 - 2016年的24次研讨会上,使用相同的、经过测试的共同设计框架,进行为期12个月的设计阶段,然后是12个月的实施阶段。收集了混合的定性数据,并用于制定五个社区共同设计创新的案例研究。一种源自文献的社会创新理论被用作分析框架,在创新增长、发展和可持续性/传播三个阶段审视共同设计案例。
发现社会创新理论与审视和理解创新发展各阶段所发生的情况相关。创新本身都是对现有想法的改编。它们的出现是因为当地参与者将来自当地背景、自身经验和范例的知识结合在一起。外部推动汇聚了资源。该项目提供了一个保护性的空间,试点创新得以在其中发展,但它们需要管理者和/或政策制定者的支持才能实施;并且要与现有的卫生系统实践相兼容。要使创新实现可持续性/传播需要政治关系。没有这些而挑战现有实践是有问题的。
社会创新为理解社区参与服务共同设计中所蕴含的基层创新过程提供了一个有用的视角。它有助于揭示共同设计过程中的问题,并强调需要建立强大的伙伴关系以及在直接社区之外进行倡导,以使新想法蓬勃发展。地区委托组织旨在传播有用的、共同设计的服务创新。需要努力建立一个创新系统,以实现社区参与共同设计的潜力。