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Achieving Research Impact Through Co‐creation in Community‐Based Health Services: Literature Review and Case Study

Policy Points: Co‐creation—collaborative knowledge generation by academics working alongside other stakeholders—is an increasingly popular approach to aligning research and service development. It has potential for “moving beyond the ivory towers” to deliver significant societal impact via dynamic,...

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Autores principales: GREENHALGH, TRISHA, JACKSON, CLAIRE, SHAW, SARA, JANAMIAN, TINA
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4911728/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27265562
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1468-0009.12197
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author GREENHALGH, TRISHA
JACKSON, CLAIRE
SHAW, SARA
JANAMIAN, TINA
author_facet GREENHALGH, TRISHA
JACKSON, CLAIRE
SHAW, SARA
JANAMIAN, TINA
author_sort GREENHALGH, TRISHA
collection PubMed
description Policy Points: Co‐creation—collaborative knowledge generation by academics working alongside other stakeholders—is an increasingly popular approach to aligning research and service development. It has potential for “moving beyond the ivory towers” to deliver significant societal impact via dynamic, locally adaptive community‐academic partnerships. Principles of successful co‐creation include a systems perspective, a creative approach to research focused on improving human experience, and careful attention to governance and process. If these principles are not followed, co‐creation efforts may fail. CONTEXT: Co‐creation—collaborative knowledge generation by academics working alongside other stakeholders—reflects a “Mode 2” relationship (knowledge production rather than knowledge translation) between universities and society. Co‐creation is widely believed to increase research impact. METHODS: We undertook a narrative review of different models of co‐creation relevant to community‐based health services. We contrasted their diverse disciplinary roots and highlighted their common philosophical assumptions, principles of success, and explanations for failures. We applied these to an empirical case study of a community‐based research‐service partnership led by the Centre of Research Excellence in Quality and Safety in Integrated Primary‐Secondary Care at the University of Queensland, Australia. FINDINGS: Co‐creation emerged independently in several fields, including business studies (“value co‐creation”), design science (“experience‐based co‐design”), computer science (“technology co‐design”), and community development (“participatory research”). These diverse models share some common features, which were also evident in the case study. Key success principles included (1) a systems perspective (assuming emergence, local adaptation, and nonlinearity); (2) the framing of research as a creative enterprise with human experience at its core; and (3) an emphasis on process (the framing of the program, the nature of relationships, and governance and facilitation arrangements, especially the style of leadership and how conflict is managed). In both the literature review and the case study, co‐creation “failures” could often be tracked back to abandoning (or never adopting) these principles. All co‐creation models made strong claims for significant and sustainable societal impacts as a result of the adaptive and developmental research process; these were illustrated in the case study. CONCLUSIONS: Co‐creation models have high potential for societal impact but depend critically on key success principles. To capture the nonlinear chains of causation in the co‐creation pathway, impact metrics must reflect the dynamic nature and complex interdependencies of health research systems and address processes as well as outcomes.
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spelling pubmed-49117282016-06-22 Achieving Research Impact Through Co‐creation in Community‐Based Health Services: Literature Review and Case Study GREENHALGH, TRISHA JACKSON, CLAIRE SHAW, SARA JANAMIAN, TINA Milbank Q Original Investigations Policy Points: Co‐creation—collaborative knowledge generation by academics working alongside other stakeholders—is an increasingly popular approach to aligning research and service development. It has potential for “moving beyond the ivory towers” to deliver significant societal impact via dynamic, locally adaptive community‐academic partnerships. Principles of successful co‐creation include a systems perspective, a creative approach to research focused on improving human experience, and careful attention to governance and process. If these principles are not followed, co‐creation efforts may fail. CONTEXT: Co‐creation—collaborative knowledge generation by academics working alongside other stakeholders—reflects a “Mode 2” relationship (knowledge production rather than knowledge translation) between universities and society. Co‐creation is widely believed to increase research impact. METHODS: We undertook a narrative review of different models of co‐creation relevant to community‐based health services. We contrasted their diverse disciplinary roots and highlighted their common philosophical assumptions, principles of success, and explanations for failures. We applied these to an empirical case study of a community‐based research‐service partnership led by the Centre of Research Excellence in Quality and Safety in Integrated Primary‐Secondary Care at the University of Queensland, Australia. FINDINGS: Co‐creation emerged independently in several fields, including business studies (“value co‐creation”), design science (“experience‐based co‐design”), computer science (“technology co‐design”), and community development (“participatory research”). These diverse models share some common features, which were also evident in the case study. Key success principles included (1) a systems perspective (assuming emergence, local adaptation, and nonlinearity); (2) the framing of research as a creative enterprise with human experience at its core; and (3) an emphasis on process (the framing of the program, the nature of relationships, and governance and facilitation arrangements, especially the style of leadership and how conflict is managed). In both the literature review and the case study, co‐creation “failures” could often be tracked back to abandoning (or never adopting) these principles. All co‐creation models made strong claims for significant and sustainable societal impacts as a result of the adaptive and developmental research process; these were illustrated in the case study. CONCLUSIONS: Co‐creation models have high potential for societal impact but depend critically on key success principles. To capture the nonlinear chains of causation in the co‐creation pathway, impact metrics must reflect the dynamic nature and complex interdependencies of health research systems and address processes as well as outcomes. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2016-06-06 2016-06 /pmc/articles/PMC4911728/ /pubmed/27265562 http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1468-0009.12197 Text en © 2016 The Author(s). Milbank Memorial Fund published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Investigations
GREENHALGH, TRISHA
JACKSON, CLAIRE
SHAW, SARA
JANAMIAN, TINA
Achieving Research Impact Through Co‐creation in Community‐Based Health Services: Literature Review and Case Study
title Achieving Research Impact Through Co‐creation in Community‐Based Health Services: Literature Review and Case Study
title_full Achieving Research Impact Through Co‐creation in Community‐Based Health Services: Literature Review and Case Study
title_fullStr Achieving Research Impact Through Co‐creation in Community‐Based Health Services: Literature Review and Case Study
title_full_unstemmed Achieving Research Impact Through Co‐creation in Community‐Based Health Services: Literature Review and Case Study
title_short Achieving Research Impact Through Co‐creation in Community‐Based Health Services: Literature Review and Case Study
title_sort achieving research impact through co‐creation in community‐based health services: literature review and case study
topic Original Investigations
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4911728/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27265562
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1468-0009.12197
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