CPCPR Doctoral Students
The doctoral students in the CPCPR are studying a range of innovative topics which address societal issues by utilising theory-driven approaches and employing creative methodological techniques. Below please find brief profiles explaining the doctoral research being undertaken by students in this Research Centre.
Doctoral Research topic
Person-centred culture in a Swiss cancer outpatient clinic: a participatory inquiry
Doctoral Research methodological approaches
Person-centred participatory research: using workplace observation, conversational interviews and critical creative workshops
Keywords
Person-centredness, person-centred culture, cancer, outpatient clinic
Supervisors
Prof. Erna Haraldsdottir
Dr. Karen Rennie
Dr. Irena Anna Frei
Doctoral Research topic:
Understanding How English-speaking Expatriate Nurses Care For United Arab Emirates Citizens With Substance Abuse Disorders.
Doctoral Research methodological approaches:
A Hermeneutic Phenomenology, Van Manen's approach
Keywords:
English-speaking expatriate nurses; substance abuse; person-centred, culturally competent care; nursing care; hermeneutic phenomenology; United Arab Emirates
Supervisors:
Dr Karen Matthews and Dr Alison Wood
Doctoral Research Topic: Understanding the symbols and relationships involved in an education partnership between a Scottish university and an Egyptian university that influence the interpretation and delivery of a transnational education programme.
Research methodological approach: An integrated person-centred, symbolic interactionist approach
Keywords: Person-centred, symbolic interactionism, transnational education
Supervisors:
Dr Debbie Baldie
Doctoral Research Topic
Improving bone mineral density and muscle strength in perimenopause using person-centred research principles
Doctoral Research Methodological Approaches
Participatory Action Research; critical creativity; person-centred principles; pragmatism
Keywords
Perimenopause, osteoporosis, physical activity, barriers, facilitators
Supervisors
Doctoral Research topic:
A participatory, action orientated study to promote older persons' relationships in a care home
Doctoral Research methodological approaches:
Participatory, action oriented approach
Keywords:
Older persons, care home, relationships, participatory research, action plan
Supervisors:
Professor Erna Haraldsdottir
Dr Caroline Dickson
Doctoral Research topic
Women's experiences of maternity care while experiencing homelessness.
Doctoral Research methodological approaches
This study is underpinned by the fairness and equity aspects of egalitarian feminism and is using community inspired photography to understand the lived or living experience of women as they try to access and engage with maternity services. It is underpinned by the principles of person-centredness from the macro context inwards.
Keywords
women, maternity care, homelessness, personal experiences
Supervisors
Dr D Baldie and Dr A Wood, QMU
Doctoral Research topic
Creating conditions to co-shape meaningful personalised measures in the Arts Therapies in statutory community mental health services.
Doctoral Research methodological approaches
Arts-based transformational action-research.
Keywords
Arts Therapies outcomes, Agreeing meaningful changes, Co- shaping outcomes, Personalised measures, Arts-based transformational action research, Participatory research
Supervisors
Prof. Erna Haraldsdottir and Dr Caroline Dickson (until Mar 2024)
An exploration of the attributes that effectively facilitate sharing decision making between a nurse and an older person in residential aged care: a participatory person-centred study
Participatory, underpinned by person-centred research principles
Older persons, person-centredness, sharing decision making, nursing, practice environment
Doctoral Research topic
Autistic neurodiversity.
Doctoral Research methodological approaches
A discourse analysis of intersubjective meaning making.
Doctoral Research topic
Music therapy with young people from multicultural backgrounds in South Korea.
Doctoral Research methodological approaches
The music therapy programme 'Mu-Being' was developed based on the values and beliefs of person-centredness and understanding the socio-cultural context of the multicultural community where young people live. Mixed methodology has been employed to explore Mu-Being experiences and outcomes holistically: it includes measures of multidimensional well-being, interpretative phenomenological themes derived from participant observation and interviews, and arts-based reflective work in the form of musical composition.
Keywords
Music Therapy, Person-Centred Practice, Young People from Multicultural Backgrounds, Well-Being, Mixed Methodology, Arts Based Inquiry, Reflexivity, Mu-Being
Supervisors
Dr Philippa Derrington, Queen Margaret University
Dr Vaibhav Tyagi, The University of Sydney
Research Topic: A critical analysis of discharge practices for older people in the acute hospital setting: identifying the implications for person-centred discharge practice.
Methodological Approach: Foucauldian Discourse Analysis.
Keywords:Older people, acute hospital, discharge, person-centred, Foucauldian Discourse Analysis.
Supervisory team:
Dr Gail Carin-Levy
Dr Juliet MacArthur (Chief Nurse Research and Development, NHS Lothian)
Third to be confirmed
Doctoral Research topic:
Complexity theory, a framework for “getting it right”: Scottish play policy as a heuristic
Doctoral Research methodological approaches:
Play is a central occupation for children. The significance of play for children is widely acknowledged by society and in research. Internationally, this is evident by the inclusion of play as a right of children in the UNCRC. Nationally, some countries, for example Scotland, have created play-focused policies to support children’s health, well-being and development.
To ensure children’s rights to access play and to optimize its benefits, a thorough understanding of play is imperative. Play, as all occupation is a complex phenomenon, requiring a multifaceted approach to gain a fulsome understanding. Complex systems theory can help articulate the important elements of play and their interrelationships.
Furthermore, a complexity framework may be helpful in understanding the relationship between play, and policy-related actions. This doctoral research aims to develop a complexity theory framework for play to enable future policies and practices to “get it right”, that is, to support children’s health, well-being and development through play.
Keywords:
Play, Policy, Complexity theory, Complexity theory framework, Children
Supervisors:
Dr. Duncan Pentland, Prof. Jeanne Jackson, Prof. Helene Polatajko (External Advisor)
Doctoral Research topic: Realist synthesis: Change agency in evidence-informed health care. This realist synthesis of change agent roles within evidence-informed health care answers the question: What impact do characteristics of the change agent have on evidence-informed health care? This project’s aims are to:
- Conduct a realist synthesis of change agent characteristics in evidence-informed health care,
- Describe the state of the published evidence on change agents’ personal characteristics in evidence-informed health care,
- Make methodological contributions to the conduct and reporting of realist syntheses’ conduct and reporting, and
- Generate program theory related to change agents’ personal characteristics in evidence-informed health care.
Doctoral Research methodological approaches: critical realist perspective, realist synthesis
Keywords: realist synthesis; change agency, evidence informed, evidence-based practice, health knowledge utilization, implementation science
Supervisors: Dr. Brendan McCormack (QMU); Dr. Jenny Ploeg (McMaster University), Dr. Jo Rycroft-Malone (Lancaster University)
Doctoral Research topic: Facilitating conditions for human flourishing. I am looking at whether or not it is possible to provide conditions for human flourishing as people work together to transform their thinking in order to change their practice. I am interested in how human flourishing can be facilitated, what methods enable flourishing, whether or not flourishing benefits the experience of individuals and groups and what facilitation approach is necessary to enable this to happen.
Doctoral Research methodological approaches: The research methodological approach I am using is Critical Creativity. It is a paradigmatic synthesis that balances and blends assumptions from the critical paradigm with ancient and creative expression, wisdom and traditions for the purposes of flourishing. I used a co-operative inquiry approach, working with co-researchers as we explored our growth and transformation during the time that we worked together. My theoretical framework blended Titchen and McCormack (2010) methodological framework for enabling human flourishing with Aristotle’s virtue ethics as it relates to eudaimonia or human flourishing.
Keywords: Human flourishing, critical creativity, facilitation, transformation, eudaimonia, virtue ethics.
Supervisors: Professor Brendan McCormack, Dr Savina Tropea, Dr Angie Titchen