Title: Mark Dooris, University of Central Lancashire
1Healthy Universities The National
Picture
Mark Dooris, University of Central Lancashire
With funding support from
2- Background
- Theory and Practice
- National Research and Development Project
- Future Plans
3- Why Healthy Universities?
- Healthy Universities Timeline
4Why Healthy Universities?
- Education is good for health
- however, HEIs can do much more, through
- protecting, maintaining and promoting health
well-being of students staff - promoting economic, social environmental
well-being of wider community - developing, synthesising, transferring applying
knowledge/understanding - maximising their potential as a generator of
health sustainability in society CSR future
shaping of decision-makers
Health is good for HEIs, helping them carry out
their core business and achieve their goals more
effectively
and, from a Health Sciences and Practice
perspective, healthy universities enables
consistency helping HEIs to practise what they
preach!
5Healthy Universities Timeline
- 1986 Ottawa Charter for Health Promotion
- 1994 Initiative established at Lancaster
University - 1995 Initiative established at UCLan
- 1st International (WHO) HPUs Conference
- 1998 WHO book Health Promoting Universities
published - English Public Health Strategy Choosing Health
- to support the initiatives being taken locally
by some colleges and universities to develop a
strategy for health that integrates health into
the organisations structure to create healthy
working, learning and living environments,
increase the profile of health in teaching and
research, and develop healthy alliances in the
community. - 2006 English National Network of Healthy
Universities established - English Teaching Public Health Networks
Initiative established with one of its aims
being to create health promoting Universities
and Colleges. - UCLan secured funding for National Research and
Development Project from Health Sciences and
Practice Subject Centre Department of Health - UCLan/MMU secured HEFCE funding for National
Development/ Networking Project
6- 2. Healthy Universities Theory and Practice
- Rationale for Healthy Settings
- Definitions
- Theory into Practice
7Healthy Settings Rationale
Health is created lived by people within the
settings of their everyday life where they
learn, work, play love WHO (1986) Ottawa
Charter for Health Promotion
many risk factors are interrelated and can be
best tackled through comprehensive, integrated
programmes in appropriate settings where people
live, work and interact.
DHSSPS (2002) Investing for Health (15.1)
8Healthy Settings Rationale
Illness
Leisure Recreation
Health Social Care
Criminal Justice
Ottawa Charter - strategies - - processes -
Community
Work/ Economy
Education
Health
Source adapted from Grossman and Scala, 1993
9Healthy Settings Definitions
The place or social context in which people
engage in daily activities in which
environmental, organizational personal factors
interact to affect health wellbeingwhere
people actively use and shape the environment
thus create or solve problems relating to
health. Settings for Health WHO (1998) Health
Promotion Glossary
In the settings approach efforts are
concentrated on working to make the setting
itself a healthier place for people to live, work
and playThe settings approach means combining
healthy policies, in a healthy environment with
complementary education programmes and
initiatives. Health Promotion Strategy for
Ireland (DHC, 2000)
10Healthy Universities Principles
and Aims/Action Areas
- Create healthy and sustainable working, learning
and living environments for students, staff and
visitors
Increase the profile of health and sustainable
development in teaching, research and knowledge
exchange.
Contribute to the health and sustainability of
the wider community
Evaluate their work, building evidence of
effectiveness and sharing learning.
UNDERPINNING PRINCIPLES diversity and equity
participation and empowerment internal and
external partnership working sustainability
holistic health and well-being practice informed
by evidence (and evidence informed by practice)
learning and knowledge exchange
11Healthy Universities Theory into Practice
whole university approach
- Anticipating Responding to Public Health
Challenges - ?
- Helping to Deliver the Institutional Agenda
Leading Organisational and Cultural Change
? Generating High Visibility Innovative Action
Securing Senior Level Commitment and Corporate
Responsibility ? Enabling Wide-Ranging
Participation
Management and Co-ordination High Level Steering
Group Designated Co-ordination Role Clearly
Defined Stakeholder Roles
Methods e.g.Policy Development, Social Marketing,
Peer Education, Impact Assessment, Environmental
Improvement
Principles e.g. Diversity, Equity, Participation,
Empowerment, Partnership, Sustainability
12Healthy Universities Theory into Practice
Mapping Connections
between components of the setting, groups of
people, issues
Systems thinking is a discipline for seeing
wholes. It is a framework for seeing
interrelationships rather than things, for seeing
patterns of change rather than static
snapshots Senge (1990)
13Healthy Universities A System-Based Approach
14- 3. National Research Development Project
- Overview
- Findings to date
15National Healthy UniversitiesResearch
Development Project
- Funded by the Health Sciences and Practice
Subject Centre (Higher Education Academy) and
Department of Health - Steering Group Margaret Sills (HEA HSP) Peter
Chell (DH) Judy Orme (UWE/SW TPHN) Sue Powell
(NW TPHN) Mala Rao (DH) - Aim to scope and report on the potential for a
national programme on Healthy Universities.
16National Healthy UniversitiesResearch
Development Project
- FOUR STRANDS
- 1. Rapid Literature Review academic
policy-related. - 2. Auditing/Mapping Healthy Universities Activity
Consultative Research - ? 1st stage audit questionnaire (n117 64 55
returned) - ? 2nd stage mapping research
- - Questionnaire 1 in-depth case study data on
HUs (n12 6 50 returned) - - Questionnaire 2 overview data on HUs (n28
15 54 returned) - - Questionnaire 3 national development (n60
18 30 returned) - Consultative Research with and Engagement of
National-Level Stakeholder Organisations
individual/small group interviews - AMOSSHE DH DIUS HEA HEFCE LFHE NUS RSPH
UUK - 4. Action Planning and Reporting stakeholder
data validation workshop, report
recommendations
171st Stage Audit Questionnaire Healthy
University Activity and Interpretations
- 28 (44) of respondents stated that they have an
established Healthy University initiative but
interpretation is variable, with aims including - To be a healthy, ethical, environmentally-friend
ly and sustainable community which values
well-being - To raise the profile of health, well-being and
sustainability within the culture, structures and
processes of the university - To promote a healthy and safe lifestyle among
students - To promote health and wellbeing in the
workplace - To hold a health week each year to promote
healthy lifestyles to students and staff
181st Stage Audit QuestionnaireWhere are
Initiatives Led From?
- In these 28 HEIs, the initiative was led by
191st Stage Audit Questionnaire Interest in
National Programme
- 96 of respondents would be interested in a
National Programme on Healthy Universities - This fits with our values we would be very
interested in being involved. - This would assist us in identifying key ways in
which we could promote health matters within the
University in a more structured way than at
present. - A national programme would help to pull
together and lift the profile of the piecemeal
activity currently going on. - There is already much good work in progress
which could be further supported and extended by
participation in the National Healthy
Universities programme. - It would be good to consider standardisation.
-
202nd Stage Mapping and Stakeholder Interviews Key
Drivers and Motivations 1
- Staff
- Valuing, recruiting and retaining staff
- Enhancing staff experience
- Reducing costs associated with sickness and
absenteeism - Improving performance and increasing productivity
- Students
- Recruiting and retaining students
- Widening participation (linked to inequalities)
- Enhancing student experience and achievement
- Providing access to young people as a target group
212nd Stage Mapping and Stakeholder Interviews Key
Drivers and Motivations 2
- Positioning universities in a market-oriented
context - Adding to distinctiveness and enhancing quality
- Aligning with key agendas, e.g. sustainable
development, corporate social responsibility,
community engagement - Using topical issues (e.g. alcohol, obesity) as
entry points - Contextual factors
- Increased focus on workplace health and
well-being - Increased recognition of impact of health on
achievement - NHS and other external targets
222nd Stage Mapping and Stakeholder Interviews
Perceived Benefits of National Programme 1
- In addition to the benefits that are also
drivers - Universities
- Encourage joined-up thinking, networking and
sharing of good practice/case study support - Provide common base line something to aim for
that is recognised and measurable with agreed
standards - Increase health-related work in universities,
encourage more universities to be involved ?
long-term health benefits
232nd Stage Mapping and Stakeholder Interviews
Perceived Benefits of National Programme 2
- In addition to the benefits that are also
drivers - Stakeholder Organisations
- Secure visible commitment to health develop
critical mass move from margins to mainstream - Provide coherent and systematic framework to
harness and connect disparate initiatives - Ensure consistency and appropriate progression
from pre-school, through Healthy Schools, Healthy
FE to Healthy Universities - Contribute to societal and economic productivity
- Develop distinctiveness and reputation of UK HE
sector
242nd Stage Mapping and Stakeholder Interviews
Barriers and Challenges at Different Levels
- Challenges faced by Healthy University
Initiatives - Applying settings approach to large institutions
- Embedding work in academic areas
- Securing and sustaining buy-in with adequate
resources - Ensuring clarity of role as hub for health
- Avoiding perception of overlap with other
services - Balancing competing agendas and avoiding
initiative overload - Lack of national guidance, leadership and support
for work - Challenges to Securing National-Level Leadership
- Independence and autonomy of universities
- Perception of universities as élite and
privileged - Negotiating competing agendas and connecting to
core business
252nd Stage Mapping and Stakeholder Interviews
Potential Shape of National Programme
Option 1 Standardised achievement criteria,
through an accreditation or kitemarking scheme
that incorporates external assessment.
- Must be evidence based benchmarks created, and
with a recognised accreditation system, like
Investors in People. - I like the idea of a healthy university
standard that you can achieve... I think this
would need to be assessed in some way and time
limited so that we have to show commitment to
maintaining our work and building on. - I think that theres a role for a some form of
national kitemarking by a national body for those
institutions that meet the requirements, the
standards, the criteria or whatever we call them
so that they get a badge of honour that is
reviewed maybe once every three years.
262nd Stage Mapping and Stakeholder Interviews
Potential Shape of National Programme
Option 2 Flexible and responsive framework that
embraces different emphases and capacities, is
consciously light-touch, focuses on
change-related inputs and processes, and utilises
self-assessment.
- It would be difficult to set up an 'achievement'
programme which has to be policed but good
practice guidelines, examples of good practice, a
communication strategy - It has to be about facilitating change and
responding to demands and requests for changeIf
it was very prescriptive, I think it would
probably backfire, but if it was encouraging
institutions to look within themselves and
consult with staff and students about what would
be appropriate for their institution, that would
be good I dont think a top-down initiative
would work. - You might need to have different layers of
models that universities could buy intoIf youre
going to have coverage of the higher education
sector, we have to come up with models that can
be applied in the various types of institutional
contexts.
272nd Stage Mapping Benefits of the National
Network
Key role of national developments should be to
build upon and strengthen the National Network
282nd Stage Mapping and Stakeholder Interviews
Potential Leadership and/or Championing of
National Programme
- Majority view that leadership must come from
within sector with clear endorsement by and
championing/involvement of a range of key
stakeholder organisations. - No clear consensus on which organisation would be
most appropriate to lead. - Recognition that leadership would influence and
be influenced by shape of programme i.e.
whether it is based on regulation, externally or
self-assessed standards, or the development and
spread of good practice. - Debate about whether the appropriate level of
co-ordination is national and/or regional.
29 - Recommendations
- Next Steps
30Recommendations
Theres a massive opportunity at the moment
which we mustnt miss. Everythings in the right
place if we dont do it now, things will move
on and well lose that impetus. Peter Chell, DH
- High level endorsement should be sought for a
sector-led National Healthy Higher Education
Programme that builds on the experience of the
National Network and draws on learning from FE
and other sectors and is supported and
championed by consortium of stakeholder bodies. - This should provide a comprehensive whole system
Healthy University Framework supported by
networking opportunities and guidance tools. - This framework should be largely process-focused,
supported by self assessment mechanisms to enable
benchmarking and progression.
31Next Steps
Theres a massive opportunity at the moment
which we mustnt miss. Everythings in the right
place if we dont do it now, things will move
on and well lose that impetus. Peter Chell, DH
- Report and recommendations submitted to HEA HSP
and DH published at http//www.health.heacademy.
ac.uk/publications/miniproject/2009mdooris.pdf - Will be important to draw on the
experience/learning of the Healthy FE programme
(DIUS/DH) Mark Dooris sits on Steering Group. - HEFCE LGM funding secured for two-year project,
to strengthen National Network (and explore links
to regional structures) and develop guidance
tools and case studies.
32Healthy Universities The National
Picture
Mark Dooris, University of Central Lancashire
With funding support from