Pre-conference: Developing person-centred cultures: participatory methodologies and practices pt.1 Har passerat
Måndag 13 maj 2024 11:00 - 14:00 J1
Workshop leader: Brendan McCormack
In this workshop we will explore the meaning of person-centred cultures and the evidence-base underpinning the significance of culture in sustaining person-centred care. Person-centred cultures are critical to the development and sustaining of care practices for all persons that are collaborative, inclusive and participative. However, we also know that developing such cultures is complex and challenging and that traditional education/training models have little impact. We will explore a variety of participatory methodologies that can be used to develop such cultures, drawing on a collective expertise from across the world by members of the PCP-ICoP. We will also explore approaches to evaluation and draw on different data sources to illustrate evaluation methodologies and their strengths and limitations. Finally, through the participatory engagement of workshop participants, we will derive key principles to underpin person-centred culture development and explore new collaborative opportunities for carrying forward such work.
Register for workshop at: https://gcpcc.org/pre-conference-workshops/
Seminarietyp
Enbart på plats
Föreläsningsformat
Workshop
Konferens
Vitalis
GCPCC
Föreläsare
Brendan McCormack Workshop leader
University of Sydney
D.Phil (Oxon.), BSc (Hons.), FRCN, FEANS, FRCSI, PGCEA, RMN, RGN, FAAN, MAE
Brendan’s research focuses on person-centredness with a particular focus on the development of person-centred cultures, practices and processes. He has engaged in this work at all levels from theory development to implementation science and through to instrument design, testing and evaluation. He is methodologically diverse, but is most at home in participatory/action research. Whilst he has a particular expertise in gerontology and dementia practices, his work has spanned all specialities and is multi-professional. He also has a particular focus on the use of arts and creativity in healthcare research and development. Brendan has more than 600 published outputs, including >300 peer-reviewed publications in international journals and 12 books. Brendan is a Fellow of The European Academy of Nursing Science, Fellow of the Royal College of Nursing, Fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland and Fellow of the American Academy of Nursing. In 2014 he was awarded the ‘International Nurse Researcher Hall of Fame’ by Sigma Theta Tau International. In 2022 Brendan was selected as a member of The Academia Europaea.