| Literature DB >> 33287307 |
Katrien Luijkx1, Leonieke van Boekel1, Meriam Janssen1, Marjolein Verbiest1, Annerieke Stoop1.
Abstract
Long-term care for older adults is in transition. Organizations offering long-term care for older adults are expected to provide person-centered care (PCC) in a complex context, with older adults aging in place and participating in society for as long as possible, staff shortages and the slow adoption of technological solutions. To address these challenges, these organizations increasingly use scientific knowledge to evaluate and innovate long-term care. This paper describes how co-creation, in the sense of close, intensive, and equivalent collaboration between science, care practice, and education, is a key factor in the success of improving long-term care for older adults. Such co-creation is central in the Academic Collaborative Center (ACC) Older Adults of Tilburg University. In this ACC, Tilburg University has joined forces with ten organizations that provide care for older adults and CZ zorgkantoor to create both scientific knowledge and societal impact in order to improve the quality of person-centered care for older adults. In the Netherlands, a "zorgkantoor" arranges long-term (residential) care on behalf of the national government. A zorgkantoor makes agreements on cost and quality with care providers and helps people that are in need of care to decide what the best possible option in their situation is. The CZ zorgkantoor arranges the long-term (residential) care in the south and southwest of the Netherlands. This paper describes how we create scientific knowledge to contribute to the knowledge base of PCC for older adults by conducting social scientific research in which the perspectives of older adults are central. Subsequently, we show how we create societal impact by facilitating and stimulating the use of our scientific knowledge in daily care practice. In the closing section, our ambitions for the future are discussed.Entities:
Keywords: co-creation; older adults; person-centered care; perspective of older adults; quality improvement
Year: 2020 PMID: 33287307 PMCID: PMC7730904 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph17239014
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Stakeholders involved in the ACC Older adults.
| Stakeholders Involved | Employed by | Number in the ACC Older Adults (November 2020) | Background and/or Expertise | Main Tasks |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Professor | Tilburg University | 1 | PhD degree in social sciences | Supervision of research projects and projects creating societal impact, chairing the ACC, strategy |
| Senior researcher/research broker | Tilburg University | 4 | PhD degree in social or health sciences, or psychology | Supervision of research projects and fostering collaboration and knowledge exchange between science and care practice and strategy |
| Communication expert | Tilburg University | 1 | Expertise in marketing and communication | Creating communication strategy and communication materials |
| Education expert | Tilburg University | 1 | Expertise in education, teaching | Fostering collaboration with education institution and making knowledge accessible in training and current curricula |
| Implementation expert | Tilburg University | 1 | Expertise in management and quality improvement | Supervising and monitoring implementation of our knowledge |
| Regular PhD student | Tilburg University | 3 | Various backgrounds | Conducting PhD research in collaboration with care practice and older adults |
| Science practitioner | Care organization and Tilburg University | 7 | Various backgrounds | Conducting research in collaboration with care practice and older adults |
| Science-to-practice project researcher | Tilburg University | 1 | Various backgrounds | Conducting research in collaboration with care practice and older adults |
| Post doc researcher | Tilburg University | 3 | Various backgrounds | Conducting research in collaboration with care practice and older adults |
| Care professionals | Care organization | Depending on the projects | Learning of and providing feedback to our studies, co-creating products, and providing feedback on our approach | |
| Older adults | Not applicable | Depending on the projects | Provide their feedback about our knowledge development and spreading, being a respondent in our studies, and teaching us what is important in old age | |
| Teachers | Educational organization | Depending on the projects | Co-creating education and using our scientific insights in teaching their students |
Figure 1Gerontechnologies Matchmaking (GTM) tool [52].
Figure 2National inspiration day 2019.
Figure 3Board game to stimulate and facilitate conversation among team members regarding intimacy and sexuality in the nursing home.