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Many healthcare improvement approaches originated in manufacturing,
where end users are framed as consumers. But in healthcare, greater
recognition of the complexity of relationships between patients,
staff, and services (beyond a provider-consumer exchange) is
generating new insights and approaches to healthcare improvement
informed directly by patient and staff experience. Co-production
sees patients as active contributors to their own health and
explores how interactions with staff and services can best be
supported. Co-design is a related but distinct creative process,
where patients and staff work in partnership to improve services or
develop interventions. Both approaches are promoted for their
technocratic benefits (better experiences, more effective and safer
services) and democratic rationales (enabling inclusivity and
equity), but the evidence base remains limited. This Element
explores the origins of co-production and co-design, the
development of approaches in healthcare, and associated challenges;
in reviewing the evidence, it highlights the implications for
practice and research. This title is also available as Open Access
on Cambridge Core.
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