Description
                        
                          Content:  Foreword Lyn Romeo  Editorial Lisa Bostock, Marie Diggins  Chapter 1 Policy update and national drivers for change Don Brand  Research overview and evidence based practice:  Chapter 2 Research review on effective supervision Caroline Webber  Chapter 3 Interprofessional supervision: Opportunities and challenges Allyson Davys and Liz Beddoe  Chapter 4 Interprofessional clinical supervision of staff in mental health and addiction: Do common elements exist across professions? Marion Bogo and Jane Paterson  Innovations in practice and best practice examples in the UK and internationally:  Chapter 5 Morrison's model Jane Wonnacott  Chapter 6 Using restorative resilience supervision to support professionals to thrive Sonya Wallbank  Chapter 7 Compassionate coaching in supervision Andy Bradley  Chapter 8 Schwartz Rounds: What are they and how do they support all staff groups working in healthcare Rhiannon Barker and Esther Flanagan  Frontline practitioner's perspectives:  Chapter 9 Integrated LD team Jeremy Winter  Chapter 10 Supervision across inter-professional boundaries: A practitioner's perspective Kevin Brett  Service user perspectives:  Chapter 11 Service user involvement in supervision Wheelchair user Maryam on supervising her PA  Chapter 12 Tish Marrable  Research digest Paul Ross  Tools and useful resources
                          
                            
                          
                        
                          Dr Lisa Bostock  Lisa is an experienced social researcher, having worked in both the academic and non-government sector to deliver policy and practice-relevant research. She has worked across housing, health and social care, within children's and adult social care and in different countries, Britain and Australia. Her specialisms include integrated working across organisational boundaries, hearing the voices and views of people who use services, applying innovative knowledge from a range of disciplines, and equipping managers and staff for new, demanding roles. Lisa is committed to ensuring that research makes a difference to outcomes for people who use services.  Lisa worked at the Social Care Institute for Excellence (SCIE) for 11 years. At SCIE, Lisa was programme lead for looked after children, including acting as vulnerable children theme lead for The Centre for Excellence and Outcomes in Children and Young People's Services (C4EO) to produce a series of publications and guides. She conducted SCIE's foundational research on a 'systems' approach to learning from mistakes in children's services, later developed as the Learning Together programme; an approach now advocated in the new DfE 'Working Together' guidance. More recently, she led a programme of work on integration, using research evidence to produce an innovative online resource that supports managers and practitioners think through the factors that promote successful joint working. Lisa has commissioned and co-authored a major review of effective supervision, identifying what works best to improve outcomes. She is currently editing a book on supervision in integrated settings.  Lisa has significant expertise around the design and delivery of systematic reviews, rapid reviews, mapping and evidence scans as well qualitative research expertise. She has broadened the understanding of evidence-based practice in operational research, promoting the value of different sources of knowledge, specifically practitioner and service user knowledge as well as academic research. She has published academic papers in the following peer review journals: Children and society; Children and Youth Services Review, Health and Social Care in the Community; Journal of Integrated Care, Sociology of Health and Illness; and Social Science and Medicine.  Over the past 12 months, Lisa has worked on the following projects:  Child protection: Effective approaches to hub and spoke service provision: supporting child sexual exploitation services (University of Bedfordshire)  Criminal justice: Improving investigative and prosecution responses to child sexual exploitation (University of Bedfordshire)  Troubled families: Evaluating Think Family expansion programme (West Sussex County Council)  Transitions to adulthood: Effective approaches to working with gang-involved young people aged 18-24 years (London Borough)  Adult safeguarding: Self-neglect policy and practice (University of Sussex)  Social work education: Evaluating new models of relationship-based social work theory and practice (University of Sussex).  Education and Training Lisa has a first class degree in Sociology with Social Policy and a PhD in Applied Social Science. She is a member of the Social Research Association.
                          
                            
                          
