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AB003. Lessons we are learning: using participatory action research to integrate palliative care, health promotion and public health through the DöBra research program in Sweden

Authors :
Carol Tishelman
Source :
Annals of Palliative Medicine. 7:AB003-AB003
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
AME Publishing Company, 2018.

Abstract

Public health and health promotion approaches to end-of-life (EoL) research and care are still rare in Sweden. People remain generally ill-prepared for encounters with death and unable to advocate for quality EoL care; this may be reflected in Sweden's low scores for community engagement in the 2015 Quality of Death index. We have consolidated our endeavours into a cohesive national transdisciplinary research program, DoBra (a pun meaning both 'dying well' and 'awesome' in Swedish). In DoBra, we investigate how culture, the environment and conversation can promote constructive change and support better quality of life and death among the general population, in specific subgroups and in interventions directed to staff caring for dying individuals, their friends and families. DoBra uses ideas from new public health and the Ottawa Charter as umbrella theoretical frameworks and participatory action research as an overarching methodological approach. In DoBra we aim to achieve change in communities in a broad sense. In this interactive workshop, we therefore focus on the particular challenges we encounter in conducting stringent research when trying to catalyse, rather than control, change processes. We will share our ideas, experiences, reflections, tools and approaches as well as results, related to using a variety of strategies to bring together a broad range of stakeholders to co-create experience-based evidence through innovative approaches. We begin by linking theory, research and practice through discussion of the overarching ideas and individual projects, with the second part of the session based on audience engagement with various tools used in DoBra.

Details

ISSN :
22245839 and 22245820
Volume :
7
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Annals of Palliative Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........b6c9fb7185b7d31c1f19eece353451fa