04880nam 2200589Ia 450 991046294320332120180911230233.01-283-87001-01-4473-0695-3(CKB)2670000000308411(EBL)1078450(OCoLC)821177974(SSID)ssj0000810501(PQKBManifestationID)11956463(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000810501(PQKBWorkID)10833395(PQKB)10147393(MiAaPQ)EBC1078450(EXLCZ)99267000000030841120120807d2013 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrActive citizens in health and social care[electronic resource] innovation and co-creation for well being /general editor, Jan Walmsley ... [et al.]Bristol Policy20131 online resource (208 p.)Description based upon print version of record.1-4473-0694-5 Includes bibliographical references and index.Better health in harder times; Contents; Contributors' biographical notes; Acknowledgements; List of abbreviations; Introduction; The inspiration for the book; Who should read this?; The structure of this book; Section 1. What business are we really in? Managing and self-managing well-being; Introduction; 1. Money matters! Personal budgets and direct payments; 2. Mainstreaming a chronic disease self-management programme - reflections on the NHS Expert Patients' Programme; What effect did a national implementation have?; Has the Expert Patients' Programme been a success?3. Health promotion - connecting people and placeThe context; Language matters; Engaging people matters; Sense of place matters; Vision and values matter; Creativity and fun matter; Bringing it together - Yeading Junior School; In conclusion; 4. Is a long-term condition a disability? Schools of thought and language; How 'long-term conditions' are framed; How disability is framed; So where does this take our discussion of language?; Conclusion; 5. Life as an active citizen - full engagement, hard work and well-being; 6. Genuine partnership7. Overview: Looking for a new social contract around the NHSThe NHS - a victim of its own success; Some hard-hitting numbers; Mass movement - cogs in the healthcare machine; Activists in 'programme space' and attempts to achieve national scale; The micro-scale - activist identity and activist practice; Roots of a new deal?; Section 2. Questions of quality - not just ticking boxes; Introduction; 8. A cataract journey; 9. Using Experience-Based Co-Design to make cancer services more patient-centred; 10. How patient stories can change the commissioning culture; 11. Turning 'care' into 'share'12. Let me tell you a story13. Quality, leadership and moral responsibility; 14. Accounting for quality - eight tips for producing reports for the public about the quality of care; Eight tips; Conclusion; 15. Overview: Quality - fantastic journey but bumpy ride?; Quality from a patient's point of view; Quality as the reduction of human error; A quality health service for a local community; Section 3. Governance - how can we really work together?; Introduction; 16. Reminiscences of an advocate; 17. Researching together - pooling ideas, strengths and experiences; 18. Becoming accepted19. Supporting 'experts by experience' - a champion ideaEducating for engagement; Why not me?; For the future; 20. Engaging communities - sharing the learning; Introduction; To conclude ...; 21. The engagement industry - some personal reflections; Structures but ...; Big events but ...; Research but ...; Projects but ...; Data but ...; Conclusion; 22. Overview: Colliding worlds - the journey towards collaborative governance; Creating a dialogue across difference; Asking the basic question; Collaborative governance - coming into sight?Section 4. How can information technology work for well-being? Data, dialogues and digital mediaThis book renews the collective compact that created our public services in the 1940s using voices from service users and service providers. Sections explore long-term conditions, service redesign, information technology, leadership, co-production and quality.Public healthPublic healthCitizen participationElectronic books.Public health.Public healthCitizen participation.362.1Walmsley Jan875072MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910462943203321Active citizens in health and social care1953491UNINA