A number of recent policies promote public participation in health service design. Yet, a growing literature has articulated a gap between policy aims and actual practice resulting in public participation becoming tokenistic. Drawing on theory from participatory design, we argue that choosing appropriate artefacts to act as representations can structure discussions between public participants and health professionals in ways that both groups find meaningful and valid. Through a case study of a service improvement project in outpatient services for older people, we describe three representational artefacts: emotion maps, stories, and tracing paper, and explain how they helped to mediate interactions between public participants and health pro...
This paper aims to interrogate the meanings and assumptions related to the term ‘participation’ in d...
Primary healthcare managers are required to include citizens in service co-design and co-production....
Background There have been repeated calls to better involve patients and the public and to place the...
A number of recent policies promote public participation in health service design. Yet, a growing li...
AbstractA number of recent policies promote public participation in health service design. Yet, a gr...
In what has been defined as an “era of participation,” design practices have become very central to ...
Abstract Context The involvement of lay people in health care decision‐making processes is now the n...
Participatory design can meet the needs of the individuals’ well-being in hospitals; however constra...
© 2014 The Authors. Published by Taylor & Francis.Public participation is an increasingly important ...
Abstract Background Despite intentions to increase user participation in the development of health s...
The theme of this session is ‘democratization’ of design. The paper gives space to critically reflec...
This paper discusses the design of things. This is done in an attempt to conceptually explore some o...
This paper describes the use of Experience Based Design (EBD), a participatory methodology for healt...
This article examines the topic of participatory design processes (co‐design, co‐creativity, co‐crea...
Service design provides the means to make sense of the complex interactions and processes experience...
This paper aims to interrogate the meanings and assumptions related to the term ‘participation’ in d...
Primary healthcare managers are required to include citizens in service co-design and co-production....
Background There have been repeated calls to better involve patients and the public and to place the...
A number of recent policies promote public participation in health service design. Yet, a growing li...
AbstractA number of recent policies promote public participation in health service design. Yet, a gr...
In what has been defined as an “era of participation,” design practices have become very central to ...
Abstract Context The involvement of lay people in health care decision‐making processes is now the n...
Participatory design can meet the needs of the individuals’ well-being in hospitals; however constra...
© 2014 The Authors. Published by Taylor & Francis.Public participation is an increasingly important ...
Abstract Background Despite intentions to increase user participation in the development of health s...
The theme of this session is ‘democratization’ of design. The paper gives space to critically reflec...
This paper discusses the design of things. This is done in an attempt to conceptually explore some o...
This paper describes the use of Experience Based Design (EBD), a participatory methodology for healt...
This article examines the topic of participatory design processes (co‐design, co‐creativity, co‐crea...
Service design provides the means to make sense of the complex interactions and processes experience...
This paper aims to interrogate the meanings and assumptions related to the term ‘participation’ in d...
Primary healthcare managers are required to include citizens in service co-design and co-production....
Background There have been repeated calls to better involve patients and the public and to place the...