The project ‘INNOVATEDIGNITY’ is being financed by the European Commission and involves experts in nursing from across the UK, Sweden, Denmark, Norway and Greece.
The trans-national training network aims to deliver “a shared, world-leading research programme to educate the next generation of thought leaders with the necessary research experience and transferable skills to deliver innovations in dignified, sustainable care systems for older people, including new care models and digital applications”.
The research will examine: older peoples' perspectives of care systems, focusing on dignity, investigating the potential for digital innovation that is person centred and exploration of gender issues in care to provide “crucial, urgently needed knowledge for sustainable and fit-for-purpose care that supports older people to live well”.
Professor Kathleen Galvin, the University of 91Ώμ»ξΑΦ’s Professor of Nursing Practice and a former practising nurse, is leading the European research team which will employ 15 early stage researchers who will experience training placements across Europe in a range of nationally-leading care organisations, professional bodies, advocacy charities and technology development enterprises alongside their three year research projects.