Squiggles and spirals: a model linking co-design and improvement science
In a busy and time-poor world, our team wanted to find a way to quickly and effectively explain how co-design and improvement science connect.
Our objectives
- Communicate what a project might feel like from start to finish
- Present a conversation starter for teams for planning, iteration and navigating uncertainty
- Frame the project using the co-design process from Beyond Sticky Notes: co-design for real (McKercher, 2020)
- Leverage visual metaphors that describe the Process of Design (Newman, 2019).
Our best draft (for now)
We landed on a visual model that describes co-design and improvement science in action.
An uncertain start is common, but as you make and learn together, this leads to clarity and purpose, and controlled growth.
Listen to the diagram here or get a copy or read the alt text (Google slide)
What we learnt
- Linear, rigid models limited the nuance and connection of co-design and improvement science
- Using lines to describe certainty and process flows is a promising communication tool
- Linking sentiment to stages, intentions and tools could assist teams to explain and begin planning their partnering in healthcare.
How we did it
We started our conceptualising by reviewing a variety of visual approaches:
- Scales and tiers seen in IAP2 Spectrum of Public Participation (IAP2, 2018), Ladder of Participation (Sherry Arnstein, 1969) and Partnering in healthcare framework (Horvat, 2019)
- Metaphors of the future (Kauffman, 1984)
- Design models (Dubberly, 2011) including the Double diamond (British Design Council, 2005)
- Matrices comparing levels of partnership vs. mindset or tools
- Journey maps with ‘sentiment lines’ (below)
Special thanks to my co-authors
Barry Baulch, Caitlyn Brennan, Peta Fawcett, Lidia Horvat, Nina Mulvey, Nami Nelson, Nora Refahi, Kristiina Siiankoski, Dan Ussher. And hosts Safer Care Victoria, Department of Premier and Cabinet Australia
References
Arnstein, S. (1969). A ladder of citizen participation. Journal of the American Planning Association, 35(4), 216–224.
British Design Council. (2005). The double diamond: A universally accepted depiction of the design process. Design Council. Retrieved March 31, 2022, from https://www.designcouncil.org.uk/news-opinion/double-diamond-universally-accepted-depiction-design-process
Dubbely, H. (2011). Design models. Dubberly Design Office. Retrieved March 31, 2022, from http://www.dubberly.com/category/topics/design/
Horvat, L 2019. Partnering in healthcare for better care and outcomes, Safer Care Victoria, State Government of Victoria, Melbourne
IAP2 International Federation. (2018). IAP2 spectrum of public participation — IAP2 Australasia. IAP2 Spectrum of Public Participation. Retrieved March 31, 2022, from https://iap2.org.au/wp-content/uploads/2020/01/2018_IAP2_Spectrum.pdf
Kauffman, D. L. (1984). Futurism and future studies. National Education Association.
Mckercher, KA (2020). Beyond sticky notes : co-design for real. Sydney, N.S.W.: Reed.
Newman, D. (2019). The Design Squiggle. [online] The Design Squiggle. Available at: https://thedesignsquiggle.com