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Resurrecting the Interval of Need concept to improve dialogue between researchers, policymakers, and social care practitioners

Resurrecting the Interval of Need concept to improve dialogue between researchers, policymakers, and social care practitioners
Resurrecting the Interval of Need concept to improve dialogue between researchers, policymakers, and social care practitioners
Academics, social care practitioners, and policymakers speak different languages. If academic research is to have an impact on society, it must be understandable and convincing to the end users. We argue that the conceptualisation of social care ‘need’ is different among these stakeholders, leading to poor communication between them. Academics should use concepts that have more meaning to practitioners. We propose resurrecting a little-used concept from the 1970s, ‘interval of need’, to help to bridge this gap. The interval of need concept identifies how often people require help, supplementing the usual data about types of tasks where assistance is needed. The history of the concept is described, followed by a test of its usefulness for today’s researchers by applying it to data from the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing. An updated version of interval of need is proposed. Validation checks were conducted against mortality data, and through conceptual validation from a social work practitioner. The nature of the dataset limited comparability with previous studies. However, we conclude that the interval of need concept has promising scope to enhance communication of research findings, potentially leading to improved outcomes for service users. This paper strives to mark a turning point in the language and analysis of social care, ensuring that academic investigation in this field is convincing and clear to practitioners and policymakers.
social care, Measurement, Older people, Communication, interval of need
0966-0410
1271-1282
Willis, Rosalind
dd2e5e10-58bf-44ca-9c04-f355f3af26ba
Channon, Andrew
5a60607c-6861-4960-a81d-504169d5880c
Viana, Joe
08970783-153c-4d53-9d2a-75f85f0364bb
La Valle, Maria, Herica
fe1168b1-fd30-46a9-b5ac-a4aa3c3202ba
Hutchinson, Aisha
3e3d9049-da2d-46bf-98b2-b7c97684f9e9
Willis, Rosalind
dd2e5e10-58bf-44ca-9c04-f355f3af26ba
Channon, Andrew
5a60607c-6861-4960-a81d-504169d5880c
Viana, Joe
08970783-153c-4d53-9d2a-75f85f0364bb
La Valle, Maria, Herica
fe1168b1-fd30-46a9-b5ac-a4aa3c3202ba
Hutchinson, Aisha
3e3d9049-da2d-46bf-98b2-b7c97684f9e9

Willis, Rosalind, Channon, Andrew, Viana, Joe, La Valle, Maria, Herica and Hutchinson, Aisha (2019) Resurrecting the Interval of Need concept to improve dialogue between researchers, policymakers, and social care practitioners. Health and Social Care in the Community, 27 (5), 1271-1282. (doi:10.1111/hsc.12769).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Academics, social care practitioners, and policymakers speak different languages. If academic research is to have an impact on society, it must be understandable and convincing to the end users. We argue that the conceptualisation of social care ‘need’ is different among these stakeholders, leading to poor communication between them. Academics should use concepts that have more meaning to practitioners. We propose resurrecting a little-used concept from the 1970s, ‘interval of need’, to help to bridge this gap. The interval of need concept identifies how often people require help, supplementing the usual data about types of tasks where assistance is needed. The history of the concept is described, followed by a test of its usefulness for today’s researchers by applying it to data from the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing. An updated version of interval of need is proposed. Validation checks were conducted against mortality data, and through conceptual validation from a social work practitioner. The nature of the dataset limited comparability with previous studies. However, we conclude that the interval of need concept has promising scope to enhance communication of research findings, potentially leading to improved outcomes for service users. This paper strives to mark a turning point in the language and analysis of social care, ensuring that academic investigation in this field is convincing and clear to practitioners and policymakers.

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Interval of Need - Authors accepted - Accepted Manuscript
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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 12 April 2019
e-pub ahead of print date: 29 May 2019
Published date: 1 September 2019
Keywords: social care, Measurement, Older people, Communication, interval of need

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 430651
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/430651
ISSN: 0966-0410
PURE UUID: 133a290a-2f49-40ef-95b6-9cd9dd143616
ORCID for Rosalind Willis: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-6687-5799
ORCID for Andrew Channon: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-4855-0418

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Date deposited: 07 May 2019 16:30
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 07:46

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Contributors

Author: Rosalind Willis ORCID iD
Author: Andrew Channon ORCID iD
Author: Joe Viana
Author: Maria, Herica La Valle
Author: Aisha Hutchinson

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