van der Graaf Peter, Kislov Roman, Smith Helen, Langley Joe, Hamer Natalie, Cheetham Mandy, Wolstenholme Daniel, Cooke Jo, Mawson Sue
Northumbria University, Newcastle upon Tyne, UK.
Manchester Metropolitan University, Manchester, UK.
Implement Sci Commun. 2023 Jan 27;4(1):12. doi: 10.1186/s43058-022-00385-0.
Despite growing enthusiasm for co-production in healthcare services and research, research on co-production practices is lacking. Multiple frameworks, guidelines and principles are available but little empirical research is conducted on 'how to do' co-production of research to improve healthcare services. This paper brings together insights from UK-based collaborative research partnerships on leading co-production. Its aim is to inform practical guidance for new partnerships planning to facilitate the co-production of applied health research in the future.
Using an auto-ethnographic approach, experiential evidence was elicited through collective sense making from recorded conversations between the research team and senior leaders of five UK-based collaborative research partnerships. This approach applies a cultural analysis and interpretation of the leaders' behaviours, thoughts and experiences of co-production taking place in 2008-2018 and involving academics, health practitioners, policy makers and representatives of third sector organisations.
The findings highlight a variety of practices across CLAHRCs, whereby the intersection between the senior leaders' vision and local organisational context in which co-production occurs largely determines the nature of co-production process and outcomes. We identified four tensions in doing co-production: (1) idealistic, tokenistic vs realistic narratives, (2) power differences and (lack of) reciprocity, (3) excluding vs including language and communication, (4) individual motivation vs structural issues.
The tensions were productive in helping collaborative research partnerships to tailor co-production practices to their local needs and opportunities. Resulting variation in co-production practices across partnerships can therefore be seen as highly advantageous creative adaptation, which makes us question the utility of seeking a unified 'gold standard' of co-production. Strategic leadership is an important starting point for finding context-tailored solutions; however, development of more distributed forms of leadership over time is needed to facilitate co-production practices between partners. Facilitating structures for co-production can enable power sharing and boost capacity and capability building, resulting in more inclusive language and communication and, ultimately, more credible practices of co-production in research. We provide recommendations for creating more realistic narratives around co-production and facilitating power sharing between partners.
尽管医疗服务与研究领域对共同生产的热情日益高涨,但关于共同生产实践的研究却很匮乏。现有多个框架、指南和原则,但针对“如何开展”研究的共同生产以改善医疗服务的实证研究却很少。本文汇集了英国领先的共同生产合作研究伙伴关系的见解。其目的是为计划在未来推动应用健康研究共同生产的新伙伴关系提供实用指导。
采用自我民族志方法,通过对研究团队与五个英国合作研究伙伴关系的高级领导人之间的录音对话进行集体意义建构,得出经验性证据。该方法对2008年至2018年间发生的、涉及学者、医疗从业者、政策制定者和第三部门组织代表的共同生产中领导人的行为、思想和经验进行文化分析和解读。
研究结果突出了各地临床与健康研究合作中心(CLAHRCs)的多种实践,即高级领导人的愿景与共同生产发生的当地组织背景之间的交叉点在很大程度上决定了共同生产过程和结果的性质。我们确定了共同生产中的四种矛盾关系:(1)理想主义、表面应付与现实的叙述;(2)权力差异与(缺乏)互惠;(3)排他性与包容性语言及沟通;(4)个人动机与结构性问题。
这些矛盾关系有助于合作研究伙伴关系根据当地需求和机会调整共同生产实践。因此,各伙伴关系之间共同生产实践的差异可被视为极具优势的创造性适应,这使我们质疑寻求统一“黄金标准”共同生产的效用。战略领导力是找到因地制宜解决方案的重要起点;然而,随着时间推移,需要发展更分散的领导形式,以促进伙伴之间的共同生产实践。共同生产的促进结构能够实现权力共享,增强能力建设,带来更具包容性的语言和沟通,最终在研究中实现更可信的共同生产实践。我们为围绕共同生产创造更现实的叙述以及促进伙伴之间的权力共享提供了建议。