Valuing Lived Experience: Learning with National Voices
Lizzie Cain
- Voices for Improvement
- Lived experience
- Health inequalities
At Co-Production Collective, we believe that reflection and learning are fundamental to co-production. It’s right there in two of our core values – we’re challenging and we’re transparent. This means asking questions, investing the time to really listen to the answers, and using that to shape our continued activity. It also means involving others in that process, bringing different perspectives together to share insights and support positive change.
We support others to work in this way too and for the last 6 months, I’ve been working alongside Rachel Matthews and Keymn Whervin at National Voices. Alongside many other contributors, they have been co-designing a prototype programme called Voices for Improvement [INTERNAL LINK], a National Voices project in partnership with Q.
Voices for Improvement
As anyone who is part of our co-production community knows, those with Lived Experience have so much knowledge about how health and care could be improved, but very rarely get the chance to influence this at strategic level. Equally, we know many leaders want to develop their own practice and embed co-production across their organisation in order to improve outcomes, but traditional methods like committees and advisory groups can be limited in their effectiveness.
Voices for Improvement provides the opportunity for those with Lived Experience to provide coaching and mentoring to those in senior positions in health and social care. Rachel and Keymn have experienced this for themselves – Rachel comes from a healthcare and research background, while Keymn brings years of Lived Experience as a carer. Both have a passion for co-production and improvement but have faced many obstacles as they’ve tried to make this a reality across organisations and systems. However, the combination of coaching and working in partnership has been transformative for both of them; this example of bringing their Lived and Learned Experience together demonstrates the real potential of Voices for Improvement to make a difference across health and care.
A Learning Partnership
My role in this work has been as a Learning Partner, supporting Rachel and Keymn by offering space for reflection, some friendly check-and-challenge, and asking lots of questions. We’ve been exploring ‘what’s changing?’, ‘how?’ and ‘why?’ as the programme has developed, as well as identifying the barriers and enablers of working in this way and doing things differently.
Some of the themes we’ve identified include:
- Working with the willing – collaborating and co-producing with those who ‘get it’ creates momentum and energy which brings other people along with you too.
- The importance of flexibility – we need to meet people where they’re at and work with what is.
- Tolerating the blur – balancing working flexibly, with uncertainty, and needing to move a project forward practically is a real challenge.
But just like this programme itself, I’ve not been doing this work on my own either. I’ve been joined by two Co-Learning Partners, Richard and Marlon, who have been designing and delivering the evaluation of the coaching and mentoring training programme alongside me. Their Lived Experience adds depth, brings new ideas, and identifies different questions than I could do on my own.
Find out more
If this blog has sparked your interest and you’re keen to learn more, come along to Valuing Lived Experience: Learning with National Voices on Wednesday 9 February, 10.30am-12pm. This virtual event will bring together lots of different voices to share more about the programme, what we’ve learnt so far, and how you can get involved.
Find out more and register via the Eventbrite page. You’re also very welcome to get in touch with me: l.cain@ucl.ac.uk
@UCL_CoPro @lizzielcain https://www.coproductioncollective.co.uk/