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Going home from hospital: an appreciative inquiry study

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Published

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Going home from hospital: an appreciative inquiry study. / Reed, Jan; Pearson, Pauline; Douglas, Barbara et al.
In: Health and Social Care in the Community, Vol. 10, No. 1, 01.2002, p. 36-45.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Reed, J, Pearson, P, Douglas, B, Swinburne, S & Wilding, H 2002, 'Going home from hospital: an appreciative inquiry study', Health and Social Care in the Community, vol. 10, no. 1, pp. 36-45. https://doi.org/10.1046/j.0966-0410.2001.00341.x

APA

Reed, J., Pearson, P., Douglas, B., Swinburne, S., & Wilding, H. (2002). Going home from hospital: an appreciative inquiry study. Health and Social Care in the Community, 10(1), 36-45. https://doi.org/10.1046/j.0966-0410.2001.00341.x

Vancouver

Reed J, Pearson P, Douglas B, Swinburne S, Wilding H. Going home from hospital: an appreciative inquiry study. Health and Social Care in the Community. 2002 Jan;10(1):36-45. Epub 2002 Jan 29. doi: 10.1046/j.0966-0410.2001.00341.x

Author

Reed, Jan ; Pearson, Pauline ; Douglas, Barbara et al. / Going home from hospital : an appreciative inquiry study. In: Health and Social Care in the Community. 2002 ; Vol. 10, No. 1. pp. 36-45.

Bibtex

@article{b07c532847e24e2980ec7b777b293a64,
title = "Going home from hospital: an appreciative inquiry study",
abstract = "This paper reports on a project that involved a number of agencies and groups, including older people, working together to examine and develop practice in an area of shared concern – going home from hospital. The project was stimulated by a {\textquoteleft}whole-system event{\textquoteright}, and was based on appreciative inquiry (AI) methodology, which has roots in both action research and organisational development. In AI, the research is directed towards appreciating what it is about the social world that is positive, and exploring this. The study was planned around three workshops to streamline data collection and analysis. Group members were also required to carry out some activities between workshops. Invitations were sent out to groups and individuals previously identified as involved or interested in the discharge process across one health district (n = 71). Workshop one discussed the planned research schedule, and introduced the basic concepts of AI. This workshop also took participants through the interview process. Each participant was asked to undertake two interviews. Thirty-five individual interviews and one focus group were completed. At workshop two, interview data were analysed by the group using the nominal group technique. Subsequent group discussion produced {\textquoteleft}provocative propositions{\textquoteright}. At the third workshop, provocative propositions were developed into action plans. This paper gives an overview of the study, and explores some of the issues involved when working with service users and providers as co-researchers.",
keywords = "older people, discharge planning, appreciative inquiry",
author = "Jan Reed and Pauline Pearson and Barbara Douglas and Stella Swinburne and Helen Wilding",
year = "2002",
month = jan,
doi = "10.1046/j.0966-0410.2001.00341.x",
language = "English",
volume = "10",
pages = "36--45",
journal = "Health and Social Care in the Community",
issn = "0966-0410",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Going home from hospital

T2 - an appreciative inquiry study

AU - Reed, Jan

AU - Pearson, Pauline

AU - Douglas, Barbara

AU - Swinburne, Stella

AU - Wilding, Helen

PY - 2002/1

Y1 - 2002/1

N2 - This paper reports on a project that involved a number of agencies and groups, including older people, working together to examine and develop practice in an area of shared concern – going home from hospital. The project was stimulated by a ‘whole-system event’, and was based on appreciative inquiry (AI) methodology, which has roots in both action research and organisational development. In AI, the research is directed towards appreciating what it is about the social world that is positive, and exploring this. The study was planned around three workshops to streamline data collection and analysis. Group members were also required to carry out some activities between workshops. Invitations were sent out to groups and individuals previously identified as involved or interested in the discharge process across one health district (n = 71). Workshop one discussed the planned research schedule, and introduced the basic concepts of AI. This workshop also took participants through the interview process. Each participant was asked to undertake two interviews. Thirty-five individual interviews and one focus group were completed. At workshop two, interview data were analysed by the group using the nominal group technique. Subsequent group discussion produced ‘provocative propositions’. At the third workshop, provocative propositions were developed into action plans. This paper gives an overview of the study, and explores some of the issues involved when working with service users and providers as co-researchers.

AB - This paper reports on a project that involved a number of agencies and groups, including older people, working together to examine and develop practice in an area of shared concern – going home from hospital. The project was stimulated by a ‘whole-system event’, and was based on appreciative inquiry (AI) methodology, which has roots in both action research and organisational development. In AI, the research is directed towards appreciating what it is about the social world that is positive, and exploring this. The study was planned around three workshops to streamline data collection and analysis. Group members were also required to carry out some activities between workshops. Invitations were sent out to groups and individuals previously identified as involved or interested in the discharge process across one health district (n = 71). Workshop one discussed the planned research schedule, and introduced the basic concepts of AI. This workshop also took participants through the interview process. Each participant was asked to undertake two interviews. Thirty-five individual interviews and one focus group were completed. At workshop two, interview data were analysed by the group using the nominal group technique. Subsequent group discussion produced ‘provocative propositions’. At the third workshop, provocative propositions were developed into action plans. This paper gives an overview of the study, and explores some of the issues involved when working with service users and providers as co-researchers.

KW - older people

KW - discharge planning

KW - appreciative inquiry

U2 - 10.1046/j.0966-0410.2001.00341.x

DO - 10.1046/j.0966-0410.2001.00341.x

M3 - Journal article

VL - 10

SP - 36

EP - 45

JO - Health and Social Care in the Community

JF - Health and Social Care in the Community

SN - 0966-0410

IS - 1

ER -