词条 | Draft:The Patient Voices Programme |
释义 |
2. There is not many external citations (from people who are not organizers of the programme). This results in the article speaking of its own subject excessively with little connection of it to the reality, out of context so to speak. Writing the story in context is required for it to be approved. 3. The article is rather long. Providing the required context and external sources often fits one or two paragraphs instead. Please consider not making the article much longer while you are continuing your work on it. Thank you. --Gryllida (talk) 05:31, 10 March 2018 (UTC)}} {{AFC comment|1=In addition, the article lacks references to reliable sources. Narutolovehinata5 tccsdnew 09:34, 26 November 2017 (UTC)}}The Patient Voices ProgrammeThe Patient Voices programme was established in 2003 and is run ( where? ) by Dr. Pip Hardy and Tony Sumner. They work to produce and distribute stories from all actors in healthcare (staff, carers, patients and relatives) ( distribute to whom? ). Thus "patient" alludes to the adjective "patient" as in forbearing, uncomplaining, tolerant, long-suffering, resigned, as well as the noun - the person who is in need of care, the patient. It is one of the longest-running ( since when? ) digital storytelling projects in the world and, as far as can be determined, the only digital storytelling project to focus specifically on healthcare. The method employed to find these voices and make them heard is digital storytelling, a concept developed by StoryCenter in Berkeley, California ( citation needed ) and refined ( how? ) by Patient Voices to meet the needs of storytellers that for various reasons may be vulnerable. Their workshop approach is documented in the film "Three days in Cambridge" by Darcy Alexandra and Reto Stamm (2017). See link below. ( include reference inline, REF says how ) The elements ( citation needed for this section ) of the Patient Voices programme
Research(citations are needed for this section so that i can verify this information accuracy ) Dr. Pip Hardys’s PhD, Telling tales: The development and impact of digital stories and digital storytelling in healthcare (2016), is available at Manchester Metropolitan University.[1] Nicole Matthews and Naomi Sunderland (2017). Digital Storytelling in Health and Social Policy.[2] The NHS is an important client and one recent example is the project “Staff Stories – the DNA of Care” (2016-17). The project consisted of five Patient Voices workshops for NHS staff across the interprofessional spectrum. See link below. Stories and reports cover a number of themes including assignments from the National Audit Office on four reports:
Awards(citations are needed for this section; whom were these awards given by?)
References1. ^https://e-space.mmu.ac.uk/618195/1/Pip%20Hardy%20PhD%20thesis%20without%20publications.pdf 2. ^https://www.routledge.com/Digital-Storytelling-in-Health-and-Social-Policy-Listening-to-Marginalised/Matthews-Sunderland/p/book/9781138024502 External links
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