USER
INVOLVEMENT
Wendy Perez & Margaret Flynn (UK)
What do we mean by 'User Involvement'?
We have to think hard about what 'user involvement' really
means. It means that instead of doing things yourself, you ask
and you include people. Instead of telling, you consult at all
times. It is not about just including people because you have
to, so that you look good or because 'Valuing People' (Department
of Health 2001) says so. People who use services have to be involved
so we do not make a pig's ear of it. We have to ask questions
about user involvement when organisations say they are doing this.
When it comes to the crunch, are they really?
Background
'Valuing People' says, 'It is no longer acceptable for organisations
to view people with intellectual disabilities as passive recipients
of services; they must be seen as active partners.' This reflects
the growing national and international interest in, and concern
about, the continued exclusion of people with intellectual disabilities
from participation in our communities. Listening to and involving
children, young people and adults with intellectual disabilities
features in legislation, policy and practice guidance across health,
education and social care services. We know that consultation
processes are undeveloped and little used. Research, practice
and our experience confirm that consulting with and involving
people are long distance goals rather than realities.
There are lots of reasons why services fail to engage with
users, including: the diversity of user groups, some of which
are 'impairment-specific' and not all can provide a strong voice;
user groups compete for funding and survival which can get in
the way of joint working; 'satisfaction surveys' are sometimes
wrongly seen as a way of involving people; people's families and
service personnel may say what they think people's aspirations
are; and perhaps more uncomfortably, services themselves are poor
at sorting their wish:
- to learn more about efficient, cost effective and responsive
services - so that they can improve the quality, and
- to extend the capacity of disabled people to participate
in decisions about the design, management and review of services.
(Barnes and Wistow 1992)
Consultative processes can set aside what is known about how
potential participants screen themselves out e.g. users respond
poorly to tokenism, oppressive practices and manipulation; greater
attention to the structures of participation is no guarantee of
getting the processes of participation right; it takes time to
change the culture of meetings to ensure their sensitivity to
user involvement; involvement in decision-making at an individual
level does not easily transfer to involvement at a community wide
level; and if the prospect of realising improvements in service
delivery is perceived to be small then people's desire for involvement
is unlikely to be sustained (Grant 1997).
How do we know that user involvement is real?
If user involvement works, you get the right vibes. These are
the things that should help us to make sure it is real.
Getting to know someoneas a person and finding out what
they are really like. You cannot do this from case records. These
blinker people into seeing only problems. It is especially important
if people have communication difficulties.
Listening carefully to people matters. You do not just
say 'yes.' You have to show that you are listening properly and
say things that show that you have been paying attention.
Giving people time at all times. People need more than
an afternoon. You cannot do it once and think 'We've done user
involvement now!'
Giving people space in which to speak easily is very important.
You have to be sure that people are not scared to say what they
want and what they feel. You have to be careful too that what
people say is not influenced by others.
Understanding is very important. You have to check with
people as many times as you need to, to make sure that you are
understanding what is being said.
Being careful of meanings. This is about what words mean
to different people. What might mean something to a user might
mean something else to a support worker.
REFERENCES
Aitchison J, Grieg R, Hersov E, Hersov J, Perez W and Towell
D (2001) Deciding together: working with people with learning
disabilities to plan services and support London, CCDC, King's
College London
Barnes M and Wistow G (1992) Researching User Involvement.
Leeds, Nuffield Institute for Health Services Studies, University
of Leeds
Department of Health (2001) Valuing People: A New Strategy
for Learning Disability for the 21st Century London, the Stationery
Office
Grant G (1997) Consulting to involve or consulting to empower?
In P Ramcharan, G Roberts, G Grant and J Borland (Eds) Empowerment
in Everyday Life: Learning Disability London, Jessica Kingsley
Publishers
This article was written in 2002.
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