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Practice Development: My personal vision for the future

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Title: Practice Development: My personal vision for the future


1
Practice Development My personal vision for the
future
  • Rob McSherry Principal Lecturer Practice
    Development Postgraduate Institute School of
    Health Social Care, University of Teesside,
    Middlesbrough, UK
  • Chair of the Developing Practice Network,
    Foundation of Nursing Studies, London UK.

Transformational Practice Practice and
Professional Development Nurses Forum
(PPDNF) Walton Conference Centre, Southern
General NHS Trust, Glasgow Scotland 14th June
2006.
Promoting Evidence-Based Practice
2
Aim
  • To share my personal vision for the future by
  • outlining where we are now
  • where we want to be
  • and by
  • highlighting whats potentially on the horizon

3
Where Practice Development is Now!
4
  • Practice Development (PD) originated in the the
    United Kingdom (UK).
  • associated with supporting modernisation,
    organisational, service and quality improvements
    but more importantly in promoting patient
    centeredness.
  • Its perceived value is in its facilitative
    approach to innovation and change

5
Highlight where practice development could be!
6
The dichotomy
  • There appears to be limited evidence
    substantiating the existence of a knowledge base
    within the field of PD
  • Need to consolidate our position and move forward
  • How?

7
Applying the Method of Concept evaluation
8
  • What are concepts?
  • Concepts are the building blocks of theory
    (Chinn Jacobs 1983)
  • Concepts may be linked together to form a
    framework of the body of the theory, and they are
    the link between abstraction and data.
  • Concepts form the theoretical realm of a
    discipline, and they are the means by which,
    through rigorous developing, testing and
    modifying,a discipline advances
    (Morse et al. 1996)

9
Defining concept evaluation
  • Concepts do not just exist or not exist they
    emerge and are introduced to the scientific
    community and mature with time (Wallace 1983)
  • A mature concept is well-developed having
    consensus and consistency amongst the theorists,
    researchers and practitioners (Morse et al. 1996)

10
Evaluation criteria
(Morse et al. 1996)
11
Literature Review
12
  • Extensive literature review on CINAHL undertaken
    at the end of 2004, using the key words practice
    development revealed 416.
  • Limited to 130, which made direct reference to
    practice development in the title.
  • From these articles, 23 are research focused and
    107 associated with informing the practice
    development debate
  • Critically reviewed and categorized literature
    into themes

13
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14
Literature Review Emergent themes/debates
aligned to practice development
Grounded in Critical social theory
Obstacles
Definitions
Practice Development
Attributions/ esteem factors
Fundamental principles
Roles and responsibilities
15
Grounded in Critical Social Theory
16
  • Habermas (1972) three kinds of knowledge
  • interwoven with Human Interest
  • Technical
  • Gaining technical knowledge to enable greater
  • skill in the delivery of practice.
  • Practical
  • Understanding and clarifying how others see
  • the world
  • Emancipatory
  • How self-reflection and self understanding is
  • influenced by social conditions
  • (McCormack et al. 2004, p37-39)

17
World views on practice development
Technical practice development
Assumptions Values Beliefs
Transformational culture
Practical practice development
Emancipatory practice development
Methodologies
Critical social theory
18
Definitions
19
  • - Kitson (1994) Research focused
  • - Mallett et al. (1997) Distinction between
    practice development and professional development
  • - McSherry Basset (2002) Team working and
    collaboration
  • - Page Hammer (2002) Quality improvement
  • McCormack et al. (1999 2004, Pg. 258).
  • continuous process of improvement towards
    increased effectiveness in person-centered care,
    through the enabling of nurses and health care
    teams to transform the culture and context of
    care. It is enabled and supported by
    facilitators committed to a systematic, rigorous
    and continuous process of emancipatory change

20
  • Clarity and consensus of what PD is and is not
  • PD is linked to change and continuous quality
    improvement
  • PD provides frameworks for facilitating and
    supporting change
  • PD supports the E approach to advancing and
    evaluating practice

21
Practice development in action taking the E
approach to advancing and evaluating practice!
Evolving

Engaging
Practice development in action
Enabling
Enlightening
Encouraging
22
Fundamental principles
23
  • Purpose
  • Quality patient-focused care
  • Using knowledge, skills and values to enhance
    personal development
  • Means through
  • Developing knowledge and skills
  • Enabling individual, teams and organisations to
    change
  • Skilled facilitation
  • Systematic, rigorous and continuous process of
    emancipatory change
  • (Booth et al. 2004,Garbett McCormack
    2001,Unsworth 2000)

24
Role and responsibilities (boundaries)
25
Practice development Facilitates and compliments
the governance agenda
(McSherry Driscoll 2004, McSherry, 1999)
26
Attribution/esteem factors (outcomes)
27
Supports modernisation
28
Dissemination
Evaluation
Collaboration
Practice Development and Modernisation
Partnerships
Best Evidence
Teamwork
29
Promotes multi-disciplinary working
30
Universal
Crosses all professional boundaries
Unifying
Practice development
Practical
Essential
31
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32
Identify whats on the horizon!
33
Practice (Quality) Encourage and
engage Protect and support Articulate and
differentiate Focus on impact
34
Educational Innovative and creative educational
programmes Stakeholder/partnerships and
collaborative working Provide easier access to
tools and techniques
35
Research and development Support and
facilitate Focus on evaluation Enterprise and
consultancy
36
Communication Developing new and creative ways
of information retrieval and giving Provide
easier and quicker access information Widen
participation Share and disseminate (Internationa
l Conference 2006)
37
Practice development patients/public employers pro
fessional Centeredness
38
Practice (Quality)
Educational
Practice development patients/public employers pro
fessional Centeredness
Research and Development
  • Communication

39
Summary
40
  • The concept evaluation criteria was a useful
    approach to identify the maturity of a new
    discipline/field of practice.
  • Practice development is an emerging and maturing
    discipline in its own right.
  • Empirical evidence exists clarifying what PD is
    and what practice developers do.
  • Essential skills, attributes and characteristics
    of practice development have been identified.

41
  • The primary principle of practice development is
    patient-centeredness.
  • The role of individuals is vital particularly in
    leadership and facilitation.
  • The future challenge is in delineating the role
    and responsibilities of PD.
  • Developing appropriate methods of evaluation.

42
  • Protect and support the position and each other
    in light of future change.

43
Concept maturity of PD against the evaluation
criteria
(Morse et al. 1996)
44
Final thought
  • It should be recognised that many conditions will
    influence PD within the context of the service
    provision. Practice development by its nature is
    not a linear process and can be messy. It can
    also be difficult to order into structure without
    dedicated roles as every organisational culture
    and working conditions are different making it
    difficult to generalise.
  • (McSherry Warr 2006)

45
Acknowledgement
46
Information about joining The Developing
Practice Network (DPN)http//www.dpnetwork.org.u
k/
47
For further information about this presentation
please contact Rob McSherry Principal
Lecturer Practice Development Postgraduate
Institute School of Health and Social Care
University of Teesside MIDDLESBROUGH ENGLAND TS1
3BA Tel 01642 342972 Fax 01642
384143 E-mailRobert.McSherry_at_tees.ac.uk
48
Thank you for your attention
  • Any Questions Please?
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