Header image for Vitalis 2024
Profile image for Celebrating Patient Journeys within a Learning Disabilities Assessment and Treatment Ward

Celebrating Patient Journeys within a Learning Disabilities Assessment and Treatment Ward Passed

Wednesday May 15, 2024 10:03 - 10:09 G2

Moderator: Erna Haraldsdottir
Presenter: Dominic Jarrett

Track: Practice-based Implementation and Knowledge Translation

Assessment and Treatment Wards (ATW) support individuals with learning disabilities where the required clinical response goes beyond that possible in the community. Individuals can find the transition into an ATW challenging, partly due to their complex and rapidly changing dynamics. Staff’s focus on person-centred practice, and health care environments as places of growth and healing, can also be undermined by circumstances out-with their control, such as delayed discharge. Gaining fresh perspective on these issues can be difficult for staff. For these reasons, a collaboration with the Glasgow School of Art (GSA) Innovation School was developed, to explore new approaches to the relational transitions which characterise admissions. Two GSA Innovation School interns from the Product Design Undergraduate course were recruited to work with staff and patients of the Ayrshire ATW over 5 weeks. Using co-design approaches they captured participants’ insights, and used them to shape practical responses to the issues, opportunities and restrictions of care within a clinical environment. The interns delivered 2 key resources: a booklet celebrating existing and potential activity within Ward 7A; and a Journey Journal. The first was intended as a vehicle for communicating and recognising existing good practice within the ward, while the second was provided as a practical resource for patients to record their experiences throughout their admission, and provide them with something to reflect back on following discharge. Both are finding practical use within the ward, and are attracting interest from other professionals and services. This is the second internship the North Ayrshire Learning Disability Service has developed with GSA. As with the previous one, it demonstrates the value in novel perspectives on complex issues; the relevance of design-thinking and practice in clinical settings, particularly as a means of enabling innovation; and the importance of spaces for creation and celebration within high pressure environments. 

Language

English

Seminar type

Pre-recorded + On-site

Lecture type

Orals

Conference

GCPCC

Authors

Dominic Jarrett, Rory McLachlan, Nicola Piggott, Kelly Shepherd, Zoe Prosser, Janet Kelly

Lecturers

Profile image for Erna Haraldsdottir

Erna Haraldsdottir Moderator

Professor in Nursing
Queen Margaret University

Professor in Nursing, Deputy Head of Nursing and Director of the Centre for Person-centred Practice Research at Queen Margaret University. Since completing my nursing degree in Iceland, palliative care has been my field of practice and research. I have led on a number of person-centred practice development projects , educational teaching programmes and research projects in palliative care both nationally and internationally. I also serve on a number of development groups in relation to palliative care education and research and have published widely in palliative care research journals.



Profile image for Dominic Jarrett

Dominic Jarrett Presenter

Learning Disabilities Development Manager
North Ayrshire Health and Social Care Partnership

I've worked in the NHS Learning Disability Service in Ayrshire for 23 years in a broad research/information capacity, and have explored topics such as integrated working, accessible information, and parents with learning disabilities. In my current role I support the integrated Learning Disability Service in North Ayrshire, and have worked closely with Day Opportunities Managers and staff in establishing and continuing to develop Trindlemoss Day Opportunities. Meaningful engagement, informed by design-based thinking and practice, have been key features of some recent collaborations, particularly those with the Glasgow School of Art.