Background
ExCHANGE is a collaboration between organisations in Devon and the South West Peninsula concerned with the care and happiness of care home residents: PenARC; the University of Exeter; the Devon Care Homes Collaborative – a group of over 250 independent care providers committed to improving the lives of those living in their care through a programme of continual review and improvement and the South West Academic Health Science Network (SW AHSN).
Ad hoc working between these partners has been taking place for several years, and the current 18-month project has been funded by The Alzheimer’s Society and the Dunhill Medical Trust. The objective of the Collaboration is to catalyse the existing relationships and develop and test a creative model of engaging care home practitioners and other stakeholders in research. Importantly, our project does not centre on a single provider but on many small local providers already connected and committed to improvement.
Project Aims
The ExCHANGE Collaboration has three core aims:
- To develop and sustain capacity amongst care home managers, staff, residents and carers to engage with, understand, and use research.
- To mobilise knowledge: that is, to open channels of multi-directional knowledge flow between the partners in the collaboration and other relevant stakeholders.
- To identify feasible, acceptable, and scalable research and implementation problems that are (a) relevant to the needs of people living and working in or visiting care homes and (b) for which we can obtain further funding.
Project Activity
We will deliver the aims of the Collaboration through three complementary components:
- Workshops: Making Sense of Evidence Workshops, intended to provide people living and working in or visiting care homes with the knowledge, skills, and confidence to understand and engage with research and research evidence; and, Making Sense of Care Homes workshops, intended primarily for researchers.
- Project Generation Forums, intended to establish local priorities for a care-home centred research agenda, enabling co-design of research projects between care-home staff and residents, community stakeholders (including family members of residents), and researchers, that is flexible and responsive to the needs and expertise of the groups involved.
- Knowledge Brokers, to span or bridge the gap between research and practice communities by supporting the exchange of knowledge and values
The project will be evaluated, based on an underlying theory of how we envisage the collaboration to work, to understand and assess the success of our partners in working together to deliver the three core aims of the project. Qualitative methods will be used to generate insights into the perceived barriers and facilitators to the collaborative model, what worked well and less well, and the outcomes of the collaboration (intended and unintended).
Anticipated Outputs
1. We will present relevant findings of what we learn and achieve at relevant national and international conferences, through plain language summaries and offering blogposts to relevant organisations. At the close of the project we will hold a learning event for all stakeholders.
2. Two papers for the research community co-authored by researchers, practitioners, and residents / family members – the pre-publication versions of which will be made freely accessible.
3. Through the course of the project we hope to support researchers and practitioners to network and identify and take forward future research ideas together. We also hope to help ENRICH become more active and established in this region of the South West.
Outputs
REPORT: Generating Questions for Future Care Homes Research
One of our aims is to generate questions for future research projects that
directly address care home practice-needs to enhance the health and happiness of
those living and working in and visiting care homes. This report displays the organic process we went through to collectively generate and prioritise future local research ideas, topics and a final set of questions. Working together as a collaboration of diverse stakeholders it was crucial that all members participated equally so that research questions generated would be firmly focused on care home practice-needs.
VIDEO: Care Home Research: Progress, Pitfalls and Potential
A seminar by Adam Gordon, Professor of Care of Older People at the University of Nottingham and a Consultant Geriatrician at the Royal Derby Hospital.
Let’s ExCHANGE!
The ExCHANGE project is about exchanging and mobilising knowledge between researchers and those working, living in and visiting care homes and is made up of researchers, care home providers and family members. Together we are exploring ways to use research to improve care home practice.
We have collated a list of PenARC research projects related to care homes and are keen to encourage further collaboration between academics and practitioners working in care homes research.
Find the full list here and the condensed list here.
Get in touch with the team to find out how you can contribute.
Related publications
The Impact of a Public Health Crisis on the Well-Being of UK Senior Care Home Staff: A Qualitative Interview Study
Download the PaperA realist evaluation of a collaborative model to support research co-production in long-term care settings in England: the ExCHANGE protocol
Download the PaperResources
- ExCHANGE project website
- Full Report The impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the wellbeing of UK care home practitioners
- Executive Summary The impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the wellbeing of UK care home practitioners
- Devon Care Homes Collaborative
- PenARC Care Homes Research Projects Condensed list
- PenARC Care Homes Research Projects Full list
- The ExCHANGE Collaboration Poster
- Generating Questions for Future Care Homes Research: Project Generation Process Report