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Conference Paper/Proceeding/Abstract 888 views

Trusting to innovate: The role of trust in rural health and social care innovation

Stephanie Best, Jan Myers

European Group for Organisational Studies, Athens 2015

Swansea University Author: Stephanie Best

Abstract

Innovation has long been promoted as fundamental to the delivery of improvements in health and social care provision. This paper explores the role of trust within the process of innovating in rural Wales. An inductive qualitative study was undertaken, which included interviews with 16 health and soc...

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Published in: European Group for Organisational Studies, Athens 2015
Published: 2015
Online Access: http://www.egosnet.org/jart/prj3/egos/main.jart?rel=de&reserve-mode=active&content-id=1392376003637&subtheme_id=1368705988013&show_prog=yes
URI: https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa22663
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last_indexed 2018-02-09T05:01:04Z
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spelling 2015-07-24T14:12:21.7358668 v2 22663 2015-07-24 Trusting to innovate: The role of trust in rural health and social care innovation 6c5e9f19f4c08123900e4c69ceaae4ef Stephanie Best Stephanie Best true false 2015-07-24 FGMHL Innovation has long been promoted as fundamental to the delivery of improvements in health and social care provision. This paper explores the role of trust within the process of innovating in rural Wales. An inductive qualitative study was undertaken, which included interviews with 16 health and social care practitioners providing innovative services to rural communities. Trust was highlighted by participants at different stages of innovation and manifested in various formats. In particular, pre early innovation is seen as an essential phase for creation of trust relationships between health, social care and voluntary sector organisations to ensure swift initiation of innovative practices. Equally the final stages of an innovative project are identified as significant to ensure trust disintegration is avoided. The paper considers the implications for organisations working across boundaries in multi-stakeholder networks and the significance of trust building and protection at critical junctures of the innovation process. Conference Paper/Proceeding/Abstract European Group for Organisational Studies, Athens 2015 trust, healthcare, innovation, social capital, rural health 3 7 2015 2015-07-03 http://www.egosnet.org/jart/prj3/egos/main.jart?rel=de&amp;reserve-mode=active&amp;content-id=1392376003637&amp;subtheme_id=1368705988013&amp;show_prog=yes COLLEGE NANME Medicine, Health and Life Science - Faculty COLLEGE CODE FGMHL Swansea University 2015-07-24T14:12:21.7358668 2015-07-24T14:09:05.2838075 Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences School of Health and Social Care - Public Health Stephanie Best 1 Jan Myers 2
title Trusting to innovate: The role of trust in rural health and social care innovation
spellingShingle Trusting to innovate: The role of trust in rural health and social care innovation
Stephanie Best
title_short Trusting to innovate: The role of trust in rural health and social care innovation
title_full Trusting to innovate: The role of trust in rural health and social care innovation
title_fullStr Trusting to innovate: The role of trust in rural health and social care innovation
title_full_unstemmed Trusting to innovate: The role of trust in rural health and social care innovation
title_sort Trusting to innovate: The role of trust in rural health and social care innovation
author_id_str_mv 6c5e9f19f4c08123900e4c69ceaae4ef
author_id_fullname_str_mv 6c5e9f19f4c08123900e4c69ceaae4ef_***_Stephanie Best
author Stephanie Best
author2 Stephanie Best
Jan Myers
format Conference Paper/Proceeding/Abstract
container_title European Group for Organisational Studies, Athens 2015
publishDate 2015
institution Swansea University
college_str Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences
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hierarchy_top_id facultyofmedicinehealthandlifesciences
hierarchy_top_title Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences
hierarchy_parent_id facultyofmedicinehealthandlifesciences
hierarchy_parent_title Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences
department_str School of Health and Social Care - Public Health{{{_:::_}}}Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences{{{_:::_}}}School of Health and Social Care - Public Health
url http://www.egosnet.org/jart/prj3/egos/main.jart?rel=de&amp;reserve-mode=active&amp;content-id=1392376003637&amp;subtheme_id=1368705988013&amp;show_prog=yes
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description Innovation has long been promoted as fundamental to the delivery of improvements in health and social care provision. This paper explores the role of trust within the process of innovating in rural Wales. An inductive qualitative study was undertaken, which included interviews with 16 health and social care practitioners providing innovative services to rural communities. Trust was highlighted by participants at different stages of innovation and manifested in various formats. In particular, pre early innovation is seen as an essential phase for creation of trust relationships between health, social care and voluntary sector organisations to ensure swift initiation of innovative practices. Equally the final stages of an innovative project are identified as significant to ensure trust disintegration is avoided. The paper considers the implications for organisations working across boundaries in multi-stakeholder networks and the significance of trust building and protection at critical junctures of the innovation process.
published_date 2015-07-03T03:26:52Z
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