III Ästhetik und Gesundheit: Potentiale und Wirkfaktoren im Health Care Design

2019 ◽  
pp. 159-174
2020 ◽  
Vol 26 (2) ◽  
pp. 118-124 ◽  
Author(s):  
Erin Ziegler ◽  
Benjamin Carroll ◽  
Chris Shortall

Design thinking methodology is a collaborative strategy with the potential to create innovations. Design thinking is being used increasingly in health care. Design jams are interdisciplinary events that bring together experts and community members to collaborate on creative solutions to health-care problems. This article describes the design thinking process and includes reflection on the authors' participation in a design jam event aimed to address the knowledge-to-action gap that exists in health care for (LGBTQI2S) people.


2020 ◽  
Vol 25 (3) ◽  
pp. 145-151
Author(s):  
Steve Chapman ◽  
Michael Lillis ◽  
Sammy Lamb ◽  
Matt Clifton ◽  
Charlotte Clay

Purpose As self-advocate leaders, the authors aim to present the perspective of people with learning disabilities on “Behaviour that Challenges: A Unified Approach”. Building on firsthand accounts which reveal compassion and cruelty in the health-care system, the authors propose ways of working, which confirm and add to the thinking in “A Unified Approach”, especially “Capable Environments”. Design/methodology/approach To ensure integrity, the authors engaged contributors with lived experience of admission to secure care after acting in ways that put themselves or others at risk. The authors included the perspective of people whose severe learning disabilities limit them to few or no words as best they could by interviewing their parents. The authors were supported and advised in the writing of this commentary while retaining full control throughout. Findings While recognising compassionate care, the authors suggest the provider’s power over a person’s life is a central reason for the care system’s vulnerability to the cruelty evident in firsthand accounts. The authors propose practical ways to offset this power. Firsthand accounts suggest the key features of capable environments are communication, valuing families and developing a valued, caring, well-trained workforce. Lived experience in workforce training and peer-support to individuals offer great potential to transform outcomes. Originality/value The perspectives of diverse contributors with learning disabilities bring lived experience insight to the challenges of “behaviour that challenges”. The authors aim to add value by blending lived experience viewpoints with the emotion of firsthand accounts of care. The insights of lived experience – too often a marginal consideration in health-care design – are presented here as central to care that fully achieves what people want and need.


JAMA ◽  
2001 ◽  
Vol 286 (14) ◽  
pp. 1701 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rebecca Voelker

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