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Articles tagged with service users

Black box

Guerilla Voice: Frontline voices are increasingly lost in the ‘black box’ of public service reform

February 17, 2013 by Michael Harris

Posted in
  • Guerilla Policy
  • Health
Originally posted on Guerilla Policy

In his letter to NHS trusts warning them against gagging orders, Jeremy Hunt said it was vital to “recognise and celebrate staff” who speak out about patient safety. The same goes for staff who stand up against ‘reforms’ which threaten the care of anyone using public services.

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Tags: A4e, frontline, gagging orders, Health, Jeremy Hunt, McKinsey, NHS, open public services, Outsourcing, payment by results, PbR, practitioners, privatisation, public sector targets, public services, service users, targets, think tanks, whistleblowing, Work Programme

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Campaigners

Guerilla Voice: Outsiders are crucial to avoiding another Mid-Staffordshire

February 10, 2013 by Michael Harris

Posted in
  • Guerilla Policy
  • Health
Originally posted on Guerilla Policy

In the wake of the recommendations made by the Francis Report into the scandal in Mid-Staffordshire NHS Foundation Trust, it’s clear that we need stronger patient representation inside the system. But as the Government itself is beginning to recognise, we also need stronger grassroots movements on the outside to keep the system honest.

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Tags: Francis Inquiry, Francis report, frontline, Health, Mid Staffordshire, NHS, practitioners, public involvement, public services, service users, social media, user involvement

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Compassion

Are we human…?

February 1, 2013 by Zoe Porter

Posted in
  • Health
Originally posted on It's Not All About the Money

“It is difficult, especially in these cash strapped times, for health services to be seen to spend their budgets on anything other than pure clinical care. We’ve all seen the headlines. Where they do, however, the results can be great.” Zoe Porter considers the emotional impact of personal health budgets, and why they represent what really matters in public services – compassion and connectedness.

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Tags: Health, NHS, personal budgets, service users, social care

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Speaking out

Guerilla Voice: Charities need to find ways to speak out

January 27, 2013 by Michael Harris

Posted in
  • Guerilla Policy
Originally posted on Guerilla Policy

This week, the report of an independent inquiry suggested that charities are increasingly afraid to challenge public policy because of fears of retribution from government, especially if they are reliant on public contracts. At the same time, the Government proclaims its commitment to ‘open policymaking.’ If we are to have better policy, it’s vital that [...]

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Tags: charities, cuts, frontline, open policy, participation, policymaking, public policy and policymaking, service users, social media, social networks, think tanks, transparency

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Copyright Luke Baldacchino

The ‘Red Tape Challenge’ does Health and Social Care

November 7, 2012 by Ermintrude2

Posted in
  • Health
  • Social Care
Originally posted on The Not So Big Society

Ermintrude2 considers the arrival of the Government’s Red Tape Challenge in health and social care – and is horrified to discover that the Government seems to consider ‘red tape’ to include protections for people who might be least able to protect their own rights.

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Tags: consultation, NHS, openness, service users, social care

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Barnet graph of doom

Best of the frontline bloggers (week ending 5th October 2012)

October 5, 2012 by Michael Harris

Posted in
  • Disability
  • Justice
  • Local Government
  • Mental Health
  • Policing
  • Social Care

Here’s our selection of the best frontline blogs we’ve read this week – from local government finances, to payment by results. Do send us your suggestions for great posts we’ve missed – and those frontline bloggers we should follow in the future. Local government Graph of doom – fact or fantasy – an alternative perspective [...]

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Tags: disability, frontline bloggers, G4S, general, local government, Policing, service users, social care

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Winterbourne View

Winterbourne View shows that some policies are ‘out of sight, out of mind’

August 16, 2012 by Chris Sherwood

Posted in
  • Guerilla Policy
  • Health
  • Social Care

In a previous post we suggested that outsourcing can be a way to protect unpopular policies. In the case of vulnerable adults with learning disabilities, outsourcing has become a way to abandon them in poorly run institutions far away from their families – until scandals like Winterbourne View force us to confront the abuse that [...]

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Tags: commissioning, CQC, general, NHS, Outsourcing, public policy and policymaking, public services, service users, social care, user involvement, Winterbourne

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Open2

Making open policy a reality (part 2)

July 19, 2012 by Michael Harris

Posted in
  • Guerilla Policy
Originally posted on Guerilla Policy

A couple of weeks ago the Government announced its plans for ‘open policy’. In this post and the previous post we suggest how it can make open policy a reality. As part of its recently published civil service reform plan, the Government has committed itself to ‘open policymaking’. It has announced a new “presumption in [...]

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Tags: Change.org, crowdsourcing, general, Inclusion, online communities, openness, participation, policymaking, public involvement, public policy and policymaking, service users, social media, social networks, technology for participation, transparency

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Camden Town Hall

How could commissioners make greater use of social media?

June 22, 2012 by Chris Sherwood

Posted in
  • Guerilla Policy
  • Local Government

How could commissioners make greater use of social media? Chris Sherwood, Co-Founder of Guerilla Policy and Director of Innovation and Development at Scope argues that commissioners should use social media as a way to collaborate with citizens to open up commissioning. In the previous two blogs I have argued that an open, iterative approach to [...]

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Tags: commissioning, crowdsourcing, general, openness, participation, public involvement, public policy and policymaking, public services, service users, social media, technology for participation, transparency, Twitter, user involvement

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shepard-fairey-obey-campaign bw

Do we need a manifesto for public and practitioner involvement in social policy?

June 13, 2012 by Michael Harris

Posted in
  • Guerilla Policy

This project – Guerilla Policy - is about developing a movement of people and organisations who use and provide public services, working together to create better social policy. Do we need to write a manifesto? Our project is based on the critique that much social policy is made by people who have little or no direct experience [...]

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Tags: business development, collaboration, free software, general, internet, online communities, open source, openness, participation, policymaking, practitioners, public involvement, public policy and policymaking, service users, user involvement

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Why we need a new approach to developing social policy – 10. It’s the right thing to do

May 21, 2012 by Michael Harris

Posted in
  • Guerilla Policy

This is the tenth in a series of posts on why social policy should be developed by and with the people who use and provide public and voluntary services. We welcome your comments on the whole series. In this series we’ve suggested that we need a new approach to developing social policy, one that involves the [...]

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Tags: general, Inclusion, openness, participation, policymaking, practitioners, professionals, public involvement, public policy and policymaking, public services, service users, user involvement

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Ten reasons why we need a new approach to developing social policy – 8. Policy would be more innovative

May 16, 2012 by Michael Harris

Posted in
  • Guerilla Policy

This is the eighth in a series of posts on why social policy should be developed by and with the people who use and provide public and voluntary services. We’re publishing the rest of the series over the next week, and we welcome your comments. With less money and, in the case of ‘rising tide’ issues [...]

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Tags: crowdsourcing, disruptive innovation, frontline, general, NHS, participation, policymaking, practitioners, professionals, public involvement, public policy and policymaking, public services, service users, think tanks, user involvement

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Ten reasons why we need a new approach to developing social policy – 7. Policy would be more diverse and inclusive, and so better

May 14, 2012 by Michael Harris

Posted in
  • Guerilla Policy

This is the seventh in a series of posts on why social policy should be developed by and with the people who use and provide public and voluntary services. We’re publishing the rest of the series over the next week, and we welcome your comments. With more voices able to participate in policy research and development, [...]

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Tags: charities, general, Inclusion, openness, participation, policymaking, practitioners, professionals, public involvement, public policy and policymaking, public services, service users, transparency, user involvement

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Ten reasons why we need a new approach to developing social policy – 4. Public services would be better

May 7, 2012 by Michael Harris

Posted in
  • Guerilla Policy

This is the fourth in a series of posts on why social policy should be developed by and with the people who use and provide public and voluntary services. We’re publishing the whole series over the next two weeks, and we welcome your comments. Public and voluntary services on the ground would be better if [...]

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Tags: general, openness, participation, policymaking, practitioners, professionals, public involvement, public policy and policymaking, public services, service users, user involvement

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shepard-fairey-obey-campaign bw

Ten reasons why we need a new approach to developing social policy – 2. Policy would stand a better chance of achieving its objectives

May 2, 2012 by Michael Harris

Posted in
  • Guerilla Policy
  • Health

This is the second in a series of posts on why social policy should be developed by and with the people who use and provide public and voluntary services. We’ll publish the whole series over the next two weeks, and we welcome your comments. In the policy world we sometimes appear to forget that ‘policy’ doesn’t [...]

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Tags: consultation, deliverology, general, NHS, openness, participation, policymaking, practitioners, public involvement, public policy and policymaking, public services, research, service users, think tanks

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Ten reasons why we need a new approach to developing social policy – 1. Policy would be better

April 30, 2012 by Michael Harris

Posted in
  • Guerilla Policy

This is the first in a series of posts on why social policy should be developed by and with the people who use and provide public and voluntary services. We’ll publish the whole series over the next two weeks, and we welcome your comments. Social policy would be better researched, more credible, more reliable, and [...]

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Tags: general, Inclusion, participation, policymaking, practitioners, professionals, public involvement, public policy and policymaking, public services, research, service users, user involvement

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Delivering public services that work depends on staff and public engagement – the same goes for public policy

April 25, 2012 by Michael Harris

Posted in
  • Guerilla Policy

John Seddon published his latest book yesterday on ‘delivering public services that work’. When all of the other fashionable ideas and theories have come and gone, hopefully we’ll recognise that John’s approach (described below) is one of the few practical and proven ways to produce more effective, and so more cost-effective, public services. But his [...]

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Tags: customers, frontline, general, John Seddon, policymaking, practitioners, professionals, public involvement, public policy and policymaking, public services, service users, systems thinking, think tanks, user involvement

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Policymaking shouldn’t be a bully pulpit

March 23, 2012 by Michael Harris

Posted in
  • Guerilla Policy

How we treat other people often reflects how we are treated, and in many organisations this gets established at the top. Workplaces with assholic chief executives easily turn into environments where bullying, passive-aggressiveness and small ‘p’ politics are rife; once modeled by leaders, these behaviours can become permissible, even normalised. We increasingly recognise that these behaviours are bad for business. So why have [...]

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Tags: frontline, general, NHS, participation, policymaking, practitioners, professionals, public involvement, public policy and policymaking, public services, service users, think tanks, user involvement

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Policy for introverts

March 6, 2012 by Michael Harris

Posted in
  • Guerilla Policy

Fairly or unfairly, a certain type of personality comes to mind when you think about think tanks. But what about the people who aren’t always the first to hold up their hands – shouldn’t they also have a voice in policy? Susan Cain’s recent TED speech in praise of introverts reminded me that we need [...]

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Tags: collaboration, general, Inclusion, online communities, openness, participation, policymaking, public involvement, public policy and policymaking, service users, social media, technology for participation, think tanks, user involvement

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Think positive

March 1, 2012 by Michael Harris

Posted in
  • Guerilla Policy

I spend a fair amount of time here considering what’s ‘wrong’ with think tanks – the way they don’t find more ways to invite the public and public service professionals into their projects, how in an age of social networks and social media they should find new ways to create communities around their work, and [...]

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Tags: general, openness, practitioners, professionals, public involvement, public policy and policymaking, public services, service users, think tanks, transparency

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News and comment

  • A reply to Nick Pearce: Why Labour must stick to child poverty targets Stewart Lansley, Left Foot Forward
  • Bedroom tax evictions begin with vulnerable residents saying they feel 'victimised' Huffington Post
  • Fitness-for-work tests unfair on people with mental health problems, court says Amelia Gentleman, The Guardian
  • Government accused of using 'anti-GP rhetoric' to mask its own failings Randeep Ramesh, The Guardian
  • I am the beneficiary of the house-price boom. My children are its victims Suzanne Moore, The Guardian
  • Majority of parents believe sex education should be compulsory in secondary schools, YouGov poll reveals Richard Garner, The Independent
  • NHS A&E departments 'left unsafe by political meddling' Nick Triggle, BBC News
  • Staff voice fears over quality of care in NHS Jeremy Laurance, The Independent
  • Tuition fees 'could be limited to £6,000' Sean Coughlan, BBC News

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