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West Yorkshire – Finding Independence Scott Bell, Co-Production and Community Engagement Worker [email protected] What is Co-Production? Co-Production is…. The term Co-Production refers to a way of working, whereby everybody works together on an equal basis to create a service or come to a decision which works for them all. It is built on the principle that those who use a service are best placed to help design it. Co-Production is…. “Co-production is a process that involves people in the design and, crucially, in the delivery of the services they enjoy” Co-Production can be…. • A description of how services rely on productive input from users • A way of recognising the input that people can make to the design and delivery of services • A transformation of design, delivery, management & governance of services Co-Production should…. • Simply ask service users how satisfied they are with services • Engage front line staff, service users, the local community, and other relevant partners to ask… “What can we design and deliver together that will benefit our area?” The other Co-Productive processes are… • Co-Designing Co-Design is…. • Service is designed collaboratively with service users, local residents, service providers and professionals • However it may still be delivered by professionals rather than on a collaborative basis Co-design vs Co-Production The difference between co-design and co-production is that co-design addresses the problem and a solution is identified whereas coproduction embeds the solution into reality. Co-Creation is identified as the way in which both of these are addressed McDougall, 2012. The other Co-Productive processes are… • Co-Delivery Co-Delivery is…. • Service is delivered in collaboration with Service Users • Allows the service to be answerable and accountable to the Service Users and their needs Examples of Co-Production • The WY-FI (West Yorkshire Finding Independence) Project • incLucid-An Alcohol Free Social Enterprise in Leeds • Timebanking • CIHM (Centre for Innovation in Health Management) at Leeds University • Shared decision making • Social Navigation/Prescribing • Volunteer and Peer Mentor Schemes The Six Principles • Taking an asset based approach • Building on people’s existing capabilities • Reciprocity and Mutuality • Peer Support networks • Blurring distinctions • Facilitating rather than delivering Ways to Co-Produce • Transactional Co-Production and Shared Decision Making • Asset based development • Experience based design • Emotional mapping • Peer Research • Reverse Mentoring and Patient/Service User Shadowing • Experience Events Does it work for the Service User? “For Co-Production to work it doesn’t always require seeing the Bigger Picture but it does require belief in the Bigger Picture and a willingness to be part of that Bigger Picture” “It works when we play our parts” (Service User) Co-Production in a quote