Our partners

Partnering with PRSB demonstrates your dedication to implementing our standards, setting you apart in the market. By working closely with us and our rapidly expanding network, you’ll contribute to advancing standards development and play a leading role in shaping the future agenda. Discover more about our partners and their impact below.

Abbott
ABLYSS
AnchorApp
Ardens
Birdie
CACI
Camascope
Carebeans
Careberry
CareDocs
CareFree
Care Line Live
Cleo Systems
Dedalus
DigiBete
EDM
EIDO Heathcare
Empathika by Careapps
EPIC
Epro
Ethos
everyLIFE
FDB (First Databank)
Fusion
Graphnet
Health Connect
Health Diagnostics
Healthy.io
Healthily
Iplanit by Aspirico
iStaffRota
KareInn
Kinseed
Interweave
InterSystems
Leecare
Liquidlogic
Log my Care
MED e-care
North Staffordshire Combined Healthcare NHS Trust
Nourish Care
Nova Healthcare Solutions
Optum
Oracle Health
Orion Health
Person Centred Software
Qwikify
Riviam
RIX Research and Media
SOS Care Management Systems
StoriiCare
System C
Thalamos
T-Pro
Unique IQ

CHAT theory also explicitly addresses five areas which if addressed systematically will help overcome stakeholder differences in pursuit of the common goal:

1. Understanding the artefacts that characterise the group and its activity.
• The artefacts might be clinical settings or the forms and templates used to capture and share information. During the pilot we heard about hard copy Dialog response forms; locally generated templates for collating information from different systems; letters and emails to GPs; images, poems or other non-text artefacts that service users might want to include in their ‘about me’ or care plan.

2. Understanding the multi-views of the group. Such groups are always a community of multiple points of view, traditions and interests. 
• Different participants in the group will have different roles and will bring to the group and their roles their own histories, language, and ‘rules’. During our Stocktake preparations and workshops we worked with psychiatrists, mental health nurses, occupational therapists, social workers, transformation leads and voluntary sector representatives, all professions and interests with their own language, approaches professional ‘rules’ but united in their interest in care plans, care planning.

3. Activity systems (like the ICSs) take shape and get transformed over periods of time. ‘Historicity’ is a term coined to express how the group’s problems and potentials can only be understood against their own history. 

 

• ‘We’ve always done it this way’, ‘that didn’t work before’, ‘it’s always like this’, ‘it wasn’t always like this’, ‘they are changing things again’, are all typical statements that often frustrate those charged with overseeing change initiatives. Without addressing the experiences that lie behind such comments you risk repeating mistakes of the past, alienating your stakeholders or just not understanding the real starting point for your transformation project. This is particularly the case for the implementation of the PCSP standard, the success of which will be largely reliant on point-of-care practices and information protocols as well as having systems which are user friendly and appropriately configured.

4. The central role of contradictions as sources of change and development. Contradictions are not the same as problems or conflicts. Contradictions are historically accumulating structural tensions within and between activity systems. Collectively addressing contradictions in how policy, practice, culture and technology interact will empower teams to find genuinely novel solutions for apparently intractable challenges, like interoperability and shared care plan/planning. 

This links to the fifth principle that:

5. the possibility of expansive transformations in activity systems. As the contradictions of an activity system are aggravated, some individual participants begin to question and deviate from its established norms. In some cases, this escalates into collaborative envisioning and a deliberate collective change effort. “An expansive transformation is accomplished when the object and motive of the activity are re-conceptualised to embrace a radically wider horizon of possibilities than in the previous mode of the activity.”