scholarly journals Implementing a vision of person-centredness across a new university hospital in Denmark

2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-3
Author(s):  
Bibi Hølge-Hazelton ◽  
◽  
Thora Grothe Thomsen ◽  
Mette Kjerhol ◽  
Elizabeth Rosted ◽  
...  

The experience of a collaborative process to build a research and development culture at a new university hospital underlined that the Person-centred Practice Framework (McCance and McCormack, 2017) forms a solid and valuable foundation for ongoing work. The fact that the process has involved researchers, leaders at different levels, clinical nurse specialists and other healthcare professionals makes the framework’s focus on the whole care environment especially relevant. How work towards a nursing research culture developed into a person-centred strategy In 2010, the management at our hospital in Denmark established a director of nursing research position, with a remit to create, develop and support a research culture within the nursing and allied health professions. No guidance was offered on how this should be done and as a consequence the ideas and professional profile of the person hired were highly influential (Hølge-Hazelton, 2019). Having a solid background in action research and studies of vocational and professional education, the new director launched a collaborative process to identify the desired characteristics of the research culture. Those contributing included the networks of clinical development nurses and head nurses, and the executive director of nursing. The proposed vision that emerged was: Our research culture should be constructive, creative, inclusive and visible at all levels of the hospital. This vision was discussed and agreed among all head nurses at the hospital. The idea was that the culture should be everybody’s business and include all levels of nursing, and furthermore that these levels would be interdependent and dynamic. The strategy to achieve this was defined as ‘bottom up, top down and don’t forget the middle’, to signal that research and development are closely related and that they should be participatory, based on a broad understanding of evidence (Rycroft-Malone, 2010), clinically relevant, and supported by the hospital’s leadership. Within the first years of work towards realising the vision, two more nursing researchers were hired in clinical departments at the hospital. They also had a background in personal and organisational learning processes, organisational development and action research. Their task was to support the realisation of the strategy at departmental and unit level.

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fariha Azalea

This research aims to promote the development of the character of learning community at Madrasah Tsanawiyah of Bantul Regency Yogyakarta, and two problems posed to be addressed: why the character of community learning pattern does not realize as it has been expected, and how does the development of the character of learning community at MTs of Bantul look like? The research uses the Research and Development model that is consisted of four stages: exploration, development, tests, and dissemination. The data were collected by means of observatiosn, interviews, questionaire, and review of documentation. The results show: (1) the character of learning community at the MTs in Bantul Regency has not been fully established because the teachers were not active in preparing their lesson study, and they did not benefit from it. Also, they were too busy in fulfilling their obligations as teachers; (2) the development of the character of learning community at MTs in Bantul could be implemented through Classroom Action Research-based lesson study plans which are consisted of five stages: consolidation of lesson study concepts, explanation of Classroom Action Research as a form of scientific publication, planning, implementation of action, and reflection.


2017 ◽  
Vol 3 (3) ◽  
pp. 137-156 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lena Brogaard

Governments increasingly use novel forms of public procurement to stimulate innovation in public service delivery. A notable example is pre-commercial procurement. Launched by the European Commission a decade ago, pre-commercial procurement encourages research and development of new solutions for the public sector. However, limited theoretical and empirical studies have made it difficult to assess and improve use of the model to foster public innovation. Based on two pre-commercial procurement projects in Denmark, the article aims to complete the first systematic and theory-based evaluation of national experiences. The evaluation shows that sufficient resources, participant and management commitment, and focused management of the collaborative process contributed to successful development and testing of a new solution in one of the projects. Meanwhile, technical obstacles in developing a prototype resulted in termination of the other project. In this case, the pre-commercial procurement model cannot accommodate significant changes to the agreed solution during the innovation process.


2018 ◽  
Vol 71 (4) ◽  
pp. 2050-2054 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maria Silvia Teixeira Giacomasso Vergílio ◽  
Vanessa Pellegrino Toledo ◽  
Eliete Maria Silva

ABSTRACT Objective: to report the experience of developing workshops as an intervention strategy in an action research, aiming to review the work of supervision in hospital nursing. Method: to report of the experience of planning, developing and evaluating workshops with a psychosocial approach. Three workshops were held, in a reserved place, with the participation of 21 supervisors of a public university hospital. Each workshop was organized with heating, day work, closure with syntheses and consensus. Results: the work provided the exchange of experiences, reflections and proposals for difficulties identified in the work process that distract supervisors from the management of assistance such as communication failure, reworking and lack of definition of assignments in the team. Conclusion: the dynamics of the workshops favored supervisors to propose solutions to the difficulties of their practice in a more democratic and participative way, through dialogical interactions, sharing of the feelings pertinent to the work context and establishing consensus for the completion of the task.


Author(s):  
Roberta Proffitt Lavin ◽  
Lynn Slepski ◽  
Lisa Rettenmeier ◽  
Janice B. Griffin Agazio ◽  
Ricciardi Richard

2018 ◽  
Vol 17 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Fernanda Carolina Camargo ◽  
Marija Antunes ◽  
Raymann Benzi Andrade ◽  
Damiana Aparecida Trindade Monteiro ◽  
Helena Hemiko Iwamoto ◽  
...  

Objetivou-se caracterizar docentes pesquisadores, pesquisas de Enfermagem desenvolvidas em hospital universitário e estratégias de translação empreendidas. Estudo exploratório, transversal, quantitativo, por análise de registros secundários de projetos de pesquisas em um hospital e entrevistas semiestruturadas junto aos docentes pesquisadores responsáveis pelos projetos. Dados foram analisados por estatística descritiva e frequências de categorias. Compuseram a análise 76 projetos e 36 entrevistados. Docentes pesquisadores eram enfermeiros (91,6%), doutores e pós-doutores (69,4%), não integravam (22,2%) e não eram líderes (86,1%) de grupos de pesquisa. Projetos mais frequentes abordavam Enfermagem médico-cirúrgica (28,9%) e Gerenciamento (23,7%); eram em maioria levantamentos epidemiológicos (73,7%) sem fomento (81,3%). Todos entrevistados divulgavam suas pesquisas em eventos ou artigos científicos, e não empregavam estratégias para translação do conhecimento. Constatou-se a necessidade de estimular entre os docentes pesquisadores a prática baseada em evidências e disseminar a concepção da translação de pesquisas, visando alcançar melhores soluções para os problemas cotidianos vivenciados no cenário hospitalar de integração ensino-serviço.


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