Hodges' Model: Welcome to the QUAD: September 2023

Hodges' model is a conceptual framework to support reflection and critical thinking. Situated, the model can help integrate all disciplines (academic and professional). Amid news items, are posts that illustrate the scope and application of the model. A bibliography and A4 template are provided in the sidebar. Welcome to the QUAD ...

Thursday, September 28, 2023

Whether, wherever, whatever you shave - you need Occam's razor

Can Hodges' model be honed by students from day #1 - 'Intro lecture 101',
 across all curricula to function as a form of Occam's razor -
a reflective and critical thinking tool
to last a lifetime's learning (and unlearning)?
 

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HUMANISTIC --------------------------------------  MECHANISTIC      
SOCIOLOGY  :   POLITICAL 
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GROUP

Occam's razor:

"entities should not be multiplied beyond necessity".

"It urges us to choose the simplest explanations or models for any phenomenon we observe."

William of Ockham, born around 1285.

"It has been a tool for scientific progress, not to mention a guiding principle for our thoughts, right up to the present day."
 
Hodges' model:
a tool for 
individual learners
and communities of practice.

"He was, I believe, the first person to so clearly separate science from its religious tethers, a move crucial to science's subsequent secular development."



McFadden, J. (2021) Razor sharp, New Scientist, 18-25 December. 252:3365/66. pp.70-71.

Saturday, September 23, 2023

MYTH, RITUAL AND PRACTICE FOR THE AGE OF ECOLOGICAL CATASTROPHE

Fabrice Monteiro, a garbage spirit, from his series
The Prophecy (2017)

The European Forum for the Study of Religion and the Environment

- is pleased to announce its
seventh international conference

Friday May 17 to Sunday May 19, 2024

Universität Potsdam, Potsdam, Germany

MYTH, RITUAL AND PRACTICE
FOR THE AGE OF ECOLOGICAL CATASTROPHE
 
Click here for the Call for Papers and Conference Description:

https://www.religion-environment.com/conference/open-call-for-papers

Proposals will be accepted until 31 October, 2023

This conference will explore the many questions that arise from the apparent continuing philosophical-scientific indigestibility of mythology, ritual and practice. What does or would gaia-logical mythology, ritual or practice look like? Are they, could they be more pedagogically effective with non-experts than analysis and critique? Is the solution to ecological alienation the same as the age-old solutions to spiritual alienation? Is ecological alienation parallel to the emic/etic divide in ethnography? Is “practice” the way “in”? Is “belief”? Does gaiaism demand rituals and practices? Are contemporary scholarly analyses (Haraway, Latour, Stengers, Mary-Jane Rubenstein’s pantheologies, Sloterdijk, etc.) today’s form of ecological myth? Is myth, with its associations with the archaic (despite the work of Cassirer, Barthes and others), a fitting genre for today? (Many traditional myths are hardly gaian.) Must gaian myth, rituals or practices be atheological (i.e., is theology, as some argue, inherently not deep-ecological)? Does subtractive theology (à la Badiou) better lend itself to legitimate gaian mythology? Do ecotheologies written out of specific continuing pre-modern cultural-religious traditions that are not entirely or comfortably gaian satisfactorily bridge the spaces between emic and etic genres/approaches and satisfy calls for new gaia-ologies? Is there a meaningful difference between the myths of “major religions” and “indigenous” cultures? How do or might “old” and “new” cultural material relate to one another? Must scholars-scientists, environmentalists or artists use only material from “their own” heritages in producing gaia-ologies? Are there bases for and modes of considering or evaluating the skill or usefulness of gaia-ologies, gaian myths, rituals or practices? How have religious or spiritual environmentalists created gaian myths, rituals or practices? How might they? What artists, artistic works or modalities or works of popular culture stand as noteworthy examples?

Conference Chair: Jonathan Schorsch jschorsch AT uni-potsdam.de

We will be most grateful if you could circulate this through your networks.

Kind regards,
Jonathan Schorsch
-- 
Professur, Jüdische Religions- und Geistesgeschichte
Institut für Jüdische Theologie
Universität Potsdam
  jschorsch AT uni-potsdam.de
  +49 (0)331 977 1744

Founder and Director
Jewish Activism Summer School
  www.jassberlin.org

Founder and Director
The Green Sabbath Project
  www.greensabbathproject.net


My source:

Philos-L "The Liverpool List". Department of Philosophy, University of Liverpool https://www.liverpool.ac.uk/philosophy/philos-l/
https://www.facebook.com/PhilosL/
@PhilosL @LiverpoolPhilos

Image: c/o https://www.fabricemonteiro.com/

I am planning to submit an abstract, to develop further ideas encountered and contributed at SOPHERE.

Friday, September 22, 2023

"Why models go wrong" BYTE, 1985

Why models go wrong
BYTE

 

"A model can be a physical object: a scale-model of an ancient settlement inferred from archeological evidence, or a physical anthropologist's reconstruction of a skeleton from a few bones and fragments. Most social models, however, are mathematical isomorphisms that specify one-to-one relationships between elements of the model and observable processes or entities. This abstractness gives models great versatility, but it also opens doors to potential problems. You don't need to be a naval architect to see that a model battleship has no bottom, but flaws in an equally defective sociometric model that repeatedly factors a large covariance matrix might escape casual scrutiny." p.151.


My source:
Houston, T.R. 1985. Why models go wrong. BYTE 10(10) : 151-164.


"Conceptual: only worth the paper it's written on"

Financial Times. June 9, 2012, p.11.  
"How do you prove you own a work of conceptual art? This is an interesting issue in today's art market, with the trend towards the dematerialisation of art, and the primacy of the idea over its physical presence.
For example, the late US artist Félix González-Torres's works include "Candy Spills", in which wrapped sweets are piled on the floor or in a corner, to be taken and eaten by viewers. When the pile has gone, the owner of the work replenishes it.
So what stops anyone making and selling their own "Candy Spill"? The answer is the certificate of authenticity issued by the artist or their estate. This scrap of paper is, in fact, the only proof that the work of art genuinely belongs to you, and this is actually what you buy and sell."

 

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HUMANISTIC --------------------------------------  MECHANISTIC      
SOCIOLOGY  :   POLITICAL 
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cognition, reasoning
imagination, 
creativity
concepts, ideas
personal aesthetics
subjective - personal meaning
"This is mine!"

materials
physical objects
dimensions, form,
properties
entropy: time, decay - disorder
change
art and arts
culture - 'what is art?'
Art criticism
Collective aesthetic

'the Market'
Economic Worth / Value
Values
Proof of ownership
law, intellectual property / ©




Adam, G. "Conceptual: only worth the paper it's written on". Financial Times, The Art Market. Collecting, June 9, 2012, p.11.

Sorting / clearing books and papers ongoing. Break next week - inc. reading.

Thursday, September 21, 2023

Raymond Williams Foundation - TARGETED GRANTS OFFER

 Dear Friends of RWF,

Can I remind you of our targeted grant scheme. Perhaps you could help us by sharing this with your network.
 
Best wishes 
Bob Foster

 

Applications are now open for five targeted grants of up to £1000 to support self-organised adult learning activities or events. Proposals should aim to enable the development and running of self-organised adult learning events or activities which have a progressive, social justice, environmental, or cultural purpose. Priority will be given to applicants on low incomes/universal credit, younger people (under 25's) and black and brown people.

DEADLINE FOR APPLICATIONS: Midnight 1 October 2023

Go to https://www.raymondwilliamsfoundation.org.uk/grants for application form

Bob Foster
RWF Treasurer


My source: PIPs

Wednesday, September 20, 2023

The Architecture of Care: Emergency shelters


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HUMANISTIC --------------------------------------  MECHANISTIC      
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GROUP

mental health / illness
psychic trauma

sense of security
sense of (new?) place

meaning:
temporary - permanent?

earthquakes, natural disasters
emergencies
sustainable shelter
Refugee shelter - design
(to last 20 years,
not disposable, 'C'-footprint)

2.5 million homeless Turkey 

Enforced displacement

Refugees

Shelter - Hope - HOME

Dignity


Forced displacement

war, conflict

meaning:
temporary - permanent?

UN statistics 17 years = temporary?




Essential Homes Research Project
Giardini Marineressa, Venice, Italy. 2022 - ongoing
"An increasing number of communities are suffering the consequences of natural disasters, wars or other humanitarian crisis, forcing them to leave their homes and countries to stay in refugee camps."


My source: Heathcote, E. (2023) Norman Foster tackles the emergency shelter. FT Weekend, Venice Biennale. 20-21 May. p.5

 See also: https://www.euronews.com/culture/2023/05/24/norman-foster-designs-forward-thinking-emergency-shelter-at-venice-biennale

Tuesday, September 19, 2023

Health information & 7th Global Alcohol Policy Conference

Politicians -
GIVE HEALTH LITERACY A CHANCE!


INDIVIDUAL
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HUMANISTIC --------------------------------------  MECHANISTIC      
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GROUP
cognitive access, basic literacy
'legibility', digital access
PUBLIC - MENTAL - HEALTH

Society
Communities
Most vulnerable groups
Digital divide

"Why are alcohol companies pushing for QR codes on labels? Well, which of these two labelling methods actually shows the risk of alcohol consumption, 1 or 2? QR codes are a way for producers to say they are informing consumers, without doing so." @InstAlcStud

economic access
Health Information For All
POLICY
7th Global Alcohol Policy Conf.
Alcohol Taxes - False economy?


My source: https://x.com/InstAlcStud/status/1703658612109742578?s=20

Sunday, September 17, 2023

New citation: "Evaluating the Human Rights Perspective on Sustainable Development Goals Accessible Health Coverage"

Just as I write about writing, this morning news of a further citation for Hodges' model via ResearchGate:

"The SDGs, aiming to establish sustainable health coverage systems and uniform condition coverage, can improve by utilizing a universal, generic assessment and evaluation strategy with sufficient theoretical breadth and application [7]."

[7] Jones P, Wirnitzer K. Hodges’ model: the Sustainable Development Goals and public health – universal health coverage demands a universal framework. BMJ Nutrition, Prevention & Health 2022;0:e000254. doi:10.1136/bmjnph-2021-000254

In - 

Evaluating the Human Rights Perspective on
Sustainable Development Goals Accessible Health Coverage

Vijay Shankar Yadav, Brijmohan Singh
ABSTRACT

Objective: Human Rights Law (HRL) relates to effects investing, that strives to produce helpful social and environmental losses with financial gains. The businesses and organizational managers are exploring innovative economic resources and strategies to increase awareness of the global investment markets' ability to support Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). Health coverage is essential for prospective human development due to that provides either an inherent human right or a necessary source of societal, economic progress. Widening income disparities, food insecurity, climate change, global financial crises, corruption and mismanagement of public funds, violent conflicts, rising unemployment, and various other difficulties point to a collective failure to achieve the right to development.

Method: Hence, HRL-SDGs has been designed for health coverage, including financial risk protection, access to excellent necessary healthcare services, and essential drugs and immunizations that are safe, effective, high quality, and cost-efficient. SDGs are established to be progress that satisfies their demands of the people with jeopardizing future generations'potential to achieve the identical.

Result: SDGs are promoted is a strategy for better satisfying the demands of society, the environment, and the economy. The process is performed through gradually integrating and realizing core human rights and essential economic responsibilities. Human rights and sustainable development improvement humans are interrelated and positively reinforcing ideas.

Conclusion: Human rights-based processes aim to help analyze discriminatory behaviors and imbalanced allocations of strength that establish results in development limitations.

Keywords: human rights law, sustainable development goals, health coverage, economic
Yadav, V. S., & Singh, B. (2023). Evaluating the Human Rights Perspective on Sustainable Development Goals Accessible Health Coverage. Journal of Law and Sustainable Development, 11(6), e1254. https://doi.org/10.55908/sdgs.v11i6.1254

(Checked: https://predatoryreports.org/news/f/predatory-journals-list-2023 ).*

To the authors - thank you. Your paper is listed in the blog's bibliography - sidebar.

*Predatory journals - authors - don't even think about it (Hodges' model has you covered!).

Friday, September 15, 2023

Draft papers: The heat is always on ...

Writing is never easy here. My 'pen' runs pell-mell and I invariably follow; dragged and teased from discipline-to-discipline, while trying to pick up any semblance of a coherent thread.

Perhaps that's the cost of being naturally(?) drawn to mind-mapping, Hodges' model specifically and the substrate - structure it affords.

While painful, the papers I've produced show (as listed in bibliography and with others) that I can get there.

In February I posted:


In truth, of course, there was no way I was going to complete a submission by July. I've been intent to throw caution to the wind, even at risk of being blown flat on the my face (and worse?).

Winding back further to October and December 2021 and the 12,000 word draft: "Society, Technology and COVID19 in Hodges' model":

https://hodges-model.blogspot.com/2022/10/draft-papers-iii.html
I approached a journal regards the draft 'Society, Technology and COVID19 in Hodges' model'. Having reduced the original 12000 words to 7700, the paper is of interest, but is (as expected) too long. There is the possibility of reducing the word count to 5000, or splitting the essay.

Duly resubmitted, the feedback from the reviewers, all three, is spot-on. 

Since the (N.) spring, I've tried to re-structure and provide a meaningful discussion. In conclusion. It's  not happening.

One reviewer noted: 

"I still do not have a clear understanding of where the model comes from and what its axioms are."
Repeating myself no doubt, the book chapter on the work of Michel Serres:

Jones, P. (2008) Exploring Serres’ Atlas, Hodges’ Knowledge Domains and the Fusion of Informatics and Cultural Horizons, IN Kidd, T., Chen, I. (Eds.) Social Information Technology Connecting Society and Cultural Issues, Idea Group Publishing, Inc. Chap. 7, pp. 96-109.

- resulted from an earlier draft which was well-shredded by the nurse journal reviewers. They did help - I've a paper to review myself.

Out of flames though that chapter quickly emerged and took flight (well, was 'completed' at least). So if you are writing and struggling - take heart.

Avoiding nursing journals (enough = enough? Nobody is interested): 

I now think I have an improved plan for two papers. The first will consider the axioms of care within Hodges' model; plus (please don't laugh!) what insights might follow if I/we treat Hodges' model as a mathematical object?

Can I claim mitigation by suggesting this (folly) is not entirely my fault . . ?

"Thus, the author can take a different approach and with a structured discussion of ideas, the author can generate testable hypotheses to move forward with a research paper. A more structured theoretical approach would also help to pique the interest of more advanced readers, especially academic audiences such as faculty who want to learn about something outside of their own research areas."

STRANGER IN
A STRANGE LAND

I feel I've no choice but to respond to the reviewer quite literally. As a non-mathematician, perhaps I can pique the interest of more advanced readers and faculty? The aim of the former archived website and this blog is to pass-on this baton2 😉to others; people who can understand it anew and apply it to the problems (solutions ...) of the century.

So in part two, the 'Society, Technology and COVID-19 in Hodges' model' piece will be structured (re-written) using hypothetical examples that ask questions of Hodges' model, the audience, and most definitely - me! It might, if not too grandiose, even ask questions of mathematics too and the humanities(?) - hence reading to follow. A real trick would be if these two papers could also stand alone.


n.b. After attending the UKSS Conference today, I must consider systems too (but don't panic - it's OK!) - to inform a title: re. humanistic & mechanistic systems? Yesterday, I really enjoyed 3 hours chatting to two fellow systems enthusiasts, who work in public health; and business / management respectively. We met in Oxford, at the Ashmolean cafe. 


UKSS Conference is bound for Oxford next year and when I have details I will post here.

Book cover:
https://www.hachette.com.au/robert-a-heinlein/stranger-in-a-strange-land
div>

Thursday, September 14, 2023

NHS management accountability

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HUMANISTIC --------------------------------------  MECHANISTIC      
SOCIOLOGY  :   POLITICAL 
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NURSING
ACCOUNTABILITY

NURSING
ACCOUNTABILITY


NURSING
ACCOUNTABILITY^


Managers accountable?
It's about time!*


Nurses have been here for a long time.

You're still not
listening though ...




*Assuming NHS managers become subject to regulation and can also be held to account.

^Yes, spiritual too.

Many nurses may not want to acknowledge or contemplate the 'politics' of health. They respond quickly: It is not why they came into the profession. But, in practice and theory you / we cannot avoid it. In nurse-patient encounters, it is ever-present; it is the other / shadow encounter.

Sunday, September 10, 2023

When 'containment' and 'protection' meet injury


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"MANUEL SUFFERED two serious brain injuries as a child in Denver, Colorado." p.54.
The function of the skull is . . ?

"Brain injuries affect about 8.5% of the general population but rates among prisoners are far higher. Kim Gorgens, a neuropsychologist at the University of Denver, reckons that between 50% and 80% of prisoners and those on parole in America have brain injuries. A review of research in America, Australia and Europe suggests that the average reported rate is around 46%. Research conducted in 2010 by Huw Williams of the University of Exeter put the rate among men in British prisons at 65%. A study published in 2017 found that nearly half of all prisoners in New Zealand had been hospitalised for a traumatic brain injury before committing their crime. Researchers suspect that the numbers may be even higher in poorer countries because road-traffic accidents and violence are generally more common." p.54.
 
"A report in 2016 by the Centre for Mental Health estimated that in Britain the cost of traumaic brain injury in a 15-year old who goes on to offend is around £345,000 ($475,000). The cost to those affected and society more widely - is incalcuable." p.55.
The function of prison is . . ?

"They are more troublesome while in prison and more likely to reoffend on release. This is especially true for those, like Manuel, who are injured as children." p.54.

"Acknowledging the link between brain injuries and criminal behaviour is not to excuse lawbreaking. Most people with such injuries are capable of taking responsibility for their actions. However, it is easier to curb crime if you understand the factors that make it more likely, of which neurodisabilities are an important and neglected one." p.13.



Banged up. International, The Economist, March 27th 2021. pp.54-55;
And: Leaders. Knocked out and locked up. 438:9238, p.13.

See also:

UK Prisons Strategy White Paper

Headway: Brain injury and the criminal justice system

Saturday, September 09, 2023

The 'quantum ballerina' - Dr Merritt Moore


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HUMANISTIC --------------------------------------  MECHANISTIC      
SOCIOLOGY  :   POLITICAL 
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"Her life to date reads like something dreamt up during a Disney story conference: pretty American teen fulfils a life-long dream of a career in quantum physics at both Harvard and Oxford. And the fantasy cash register goes right on ringing because our heroine has not one career, but two. Between all-night stints in the lab she leads a double life as a professional ballet dancer.
At this point one the grown-ups in our imaginary brainstorm might lean in and suggest that maybe the two-career thing was a mite, er, far-fetched? But Dr Merritt Moore, quantum physicist and alumna of four major-league ballet companies (Zurich, Boston, Norwegian, and English National), is living proof that this crazy scenario can be lived in real time by anyone with the ability to devote themselves body and soul to the dreams that devour them." p.12.

Skjalg Bøhmer Vold, Courtesy Merritt Moore





Dr Merritt Moore

Levene, L. (2021) The 'quantum ballerina' and her robot pas de deux", FTWeekend, Life&Arts, 27-28 March, p.12.

See also:
https://pointemagazine.com/merritt-moore-ballet/

Previously:
https://hodges-model.blogspot.com/2021/12/raymonda-ballet.html


Friday, September 08, 2023

All That She Carried: The Journey of Ashley's Sack, a Black Family Keepsake - Book

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HUMANISTIC --------------------------------------  MECHANISTIC      
SOCIOLOGY  :   POLITICAL 
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Shameran81, CC BY-SA 4.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0>, via Wikimedia Commons

"My great grandmother Rose
mother of Ashley gave her this sack when
she was sold at age 9 in South Carolina
it held a tattered dress 3 handfulls of 
pecans a braid of Roses hair. Told her 
It be filled with my Love always
she never saw her again
Ashley is my grandmother
Ruth Middleton
1921"









Miles, T. (2023) All That She Carried: The Journey of Ashley's Sack, a Black Family Keepsake. London: Profile Books.
https://profilebooks.com/work/all-that-she-carried/



Scholes, L. (2023) Stitches in time, FT Weekend, Life&Arts, Books, 5-6 August, p.8.

Wednesday, September 06, 2023

Ability Today's Accessible Online Dip. in Journalism - Launches Next Course


Hello 

Ability Today's ADJ Launches Next Diploma Course

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Would you please share this with your network to help us reach as many potential students who we can support on their journey into journalism?

We also welcome any further involvement you may wish to have in this program, such as offering mentorship, resources, or scholarships.

Should you have any questions or require additional information, please don't hesitate to contact me directly at grant AT abilitytoday.com.

Here is a link to our academy page with a short promotional video and further details:

abilitytoday.com/diploma-in-journalism/

twitter.com/ADJnews/status/

Best

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Monday, September 04, 2023

"Models, Theories and Concepts" c/o Smith (1994). Plus ça change ...

"Whilst the impracticality of unified approaches has been noted for some time (McFarlane, 1976), it is still considered that many theories, in their efforts to explain everything, succeed only in explaining nothing (Draper, 1990). Therefore, as Kenny (1992) points out, the use of theories and models in nursing has resulted in sweeping generalizations which 'are not always personally, culturally or contextually appropriate'.

In overcoming this difficulty many authors advocate that theories of lesser scope and abstraction are considered (McFarlane, 1976; Clarke, 1986; Draper, 1990; Moore, 1990; Ingram, 1991; Reid & Bond, 1991). Such theories have been termed 'mid-range' and address a more limited number of variables in particular situations (scope), whilst being empirically grounded and focusing on practical problems (abstraction) (Rogers & Shoemaker, 1971; Walker & Avant, 1983; Fawcett, 1984; Lowenberg, 1984). According to Clarke (1986), mid-range theories should appeal to practitioners as being more directly accessible conceptually and linguistically. Reed & Robinson (1991) contend that, given the diversity of nursing practice, the search for grand theory is inappropriate and nursing would be better served by developing mid-range theories that are 'more precisely stated, more easily treated and produce more specific indications for practice'." pp. 59-60.


Smith, J.P. (1994) Advanced Nursing Series - Models, Theories and Concepts. Oxford: Blackwell Scientific Publications.


While the structure of Hodges' model is global - 'grand' in scope, the model, as a template is blank and open to whatever conceptual content follows in the practice situation, or context. 'Precision' can be assured using Hodges' model as it can facilitate person-centred care, integrated care, reflection, critical thinking and conceptual development. 

Delivery of high-quality health care is not a given. 

Safe, effective and equitable care is variously dependent upon staffing, the skills and attitudes of individual nurses, staff numbers, skill-mix, team effectiveness and resource allocation. Hodges' model can also assist users to recognise and call-out unmet needs, deficits in the quality of care, and risks to the safety of patients, the public, staff and the profession.


At risk of sounding grand if not grandiose ...
Change will and must follow - in respect of models and theories, not just of and for nursing but health and care at scale.

Friday, September 01, 2023

Brian E. Hodges (1942-2022) RIP Creator of Hodges' Health Career Model

The end of 2022 and start of 2023 brought loss, reflection and change in terms of family, friends and educational ties. My children said goodbye to their grandmothers in the space of two months. 

Brian E. Hodges c/o Family.
Then I was contacted by Brian Hodges’s daughter Sarah, with the news her father had died. November through to January saw me attend three consecutive funerals. I’m grateful I was able to visit Sheffield and say goodbye to Brian and meet his extended family.

Yes, it has taken a while to post this. For six months I have been sorting, clearing, rationalising books, papers with a house-sale now imminent, liaising with Brian's family too. 

It is fitting to share this sad news now and celebrate lives well-lived, cast in the promise of a new academic year. I think Brian would have liked this - the potential, and prospects for students in the semesters to follow, lecturers wrestling with how best to communicate and engage their students.

I first met Brian in 1987 when he was a Senior Lecturer at Manchester Polytechnic - which is now Manchester Metropolitan University. Brian taught on the ENB 911 Care of the Mentally Ill in the Community Certificate course. On the course Brian explained his eponymous model. This was more than a decade before Project 2000 made nursing an undergraduate programme. Brian created the model as a response to this. Brian’s qualification in Learning Disability Nursing is key to the inclusion of individual, group (carers) and the POLITICAL domain.

The model contributed to our assessment on the course, which required we complete a case study applying the model to a client/patient on a placement which was conducted with another service. Seconded from Chorley my placement experience was at Bolton. I still have my case study and a set of Brian’s original lecture notes.

Straight away I knew there was something special about Brian’s model. I suspect I’d been primed after watching Tony Buzan’s TV programmes in the 1970s, ‘Use Your Head’ and related books on mind-mapping. By the time I joined the Internet-age it was 1997. I’d written some microcomputer programs on the ZX81 and BBC Micro ‘B’: Nursing Process, Computer Aided Patient Assessment; HAEM; and Shades of Grey. Several were published by Open Software Library (no longer operating).

An ongoing interest developed in nursing theory and models of care, from reading about the nursing process. An early thought about creating a computer program about Hodges’ model crystallised in March 1997 when I came across the Nursing Development Site. This was hosted by the University of Alberta, Canada. Seeing that Hodges’ model was not listed, I contacted the site’s administrator. The response was: “Why don’t you create something and let us know.” Brian was very patient and offered his thoughts via email exchanges (saved, but in Turnpike format). In 1998 I finally got in touch with Alberta and they added a link.

The notes below are from the resulting website (1998-2015 now archived). The product of an interview with Brian at Manchester Polytechnic and my interpretation of model:
“Brian thought up HCM on the then British Rail train service, commuting between Sheffield and Manchester in 1983. He was stimulated by the need to impose structure on a curriculum for a BSc Nursing Studies course. Having defined the model in 1983 a scheduled teacher was unable to take a class, providing an opportunity for Brian to share the model and his thoughts with students. Despite this impromptu start, within a short time academic colleagues recognized the value of HCM in curriculum design and development, in addition to clinical practice.
 
A problem for practitioners has always been ensuring a comprehensive assessment has been made. The HCM facilitates that process, as an aide-mémoire, especially critical when faced with child care / abuse assessment and care evaluations. HCM was adopted as a tool for use by students on courses. Not surprisingly a key area of application is Health Visiting. Other nursing fields includes the use of case studies in post-basic education - Community Psychiatry Nursing Certificate; community and mental handicap - now learning disabilities.
 
Key phases in development
 
The main development work following initial conception, was up to 1987. Due to illness in 1990 Brian has been unable to engage in in-depth development work with the HCM. Hence Brian's bemused surprise at my contacting him. Despite this there are many educators, clinicians and no doubt health care managers who having been exposed to HCM carry it, like myself, as part of their mental toolkit. So if you have taught or used HCM in the past, or (even better) use it currently Brian and I would be delighted to hear from you. Given the duration of courses at Manchester then of course many colleagues in other parts of the north west of England have heard of HCM, used the HCM, or possess a college set of notes on HCM. Do you?” . . .

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Sarah and family have kindly forwarded the eulogy which includes:
“Dad was born on 30th January 1942 to Vera and Gilbert Hodges, he was the eldest of three with a sister, Rita and younger brother Philip. He grew up in Kingswood, a suburb of Bristol and attended the local Grammar school. He loved being a Scout and was a member of the YMCA.

When he left school, he went to work for Boots the Chemist, telling us often about his’ behind the counter’ days. However, a conversation with a colleague led him to rethink his career and he applied to train as a nurse at a hospital for patients with learning difficulties. Being a male nurse in the 1960’s was quite ground-breaking, and so typical of Dad who was always pushing boundaries and taking the ‘road less travelled’.

Dad realised that he enjoyed teaching the students and became determined to raise the profile of nursing those with learning difficulties. This led to him to taking a year’s teacher training at Bolton College and with his new qualification he was determined to make an impact on nursing. In 1972 this lead to the move to Sheffield to set up a nurse training course at Sheffield Polytechnic and Middlewood hospital. He loved this job and the impact he could have on training nurses, alongside this he embarked on an Open University Degree and also developed the Hodges Health career model for nursing, which facilitated integrated care, person centredness, reflective practice and helped to bridge the theory and practice gap. He was very proud of this work, and it remains in use.
 
Alongside his work interests Dad decided that he would learn to sail, and not only how to sail, but also how to build a boat. The boat started life in the hallway of the house in Meadow Grove Road, and whilst it amused me and Sarah, there must have been a moment where Mum asked him to move it somewhere more suitable. He successfully built the boat and taught us all how to sail.
Back to his work life he was offered a job as a lecturer at Manchester University and later became Head of Nursing Studies there. He loved his job and invested a lot of time in encouraging his students with his indomitable wit and zest for life. Always wanting to learn more, he also studied for an MSc in Health Education, which meant he travelled to London and loved to tell us about his walks around Chelsea.

Life changed dramatically in 1990 when aged only 48 Dad had a severe stroke which led to a left side paralysis; and a medical assessment that he would not walk again. His sheer determination meant that he did in fact walk, although never regained use of his left arm, which made a lot of day to day tasks very difficult. He had no hesitation about asking strangers to help on his trips to London in his electric wheelchair.

Although Dad returned to work a year after the stroke, he found he could no longer do the job the way he wanted to and took early retirement. Being Dad, he did not stop working and continued to do some teaching, and travelled to other education centres as an external examiner. He also took up a number of volunteering activities which could make use of his skills. He became really involved in health care improvement through service user input and ultimately Chair of Shop Mobility in Sheffield.

One volunteering opportunity led to many and he took up a number of positions in both Sheffield and London. He loved to travel to London on his own on the train, where after his meetings, he would meet Sarah for dinner. He always said ‘focus on what you can do’ so that is what he did. After the stroke he learned to swim again and joined his grandchildren in the pool at Centre-parcs, and played badminton on one of his much loved family holidays.

He did not let the stroke stop him travelling at all and visited France, Florida, Barbados and even St Petersburg in his wheelchair. He also loved trips to Chatsworth for ice cream.

He loved listening to jazz music and rock, had learned to paint and draw. He loved the theatre and bird watching and was an avid reader. In fact, he was interested in everything, knew so much on any topic you could choose, and always more up to date than those around him, often much younger, on all the latest thinking or technology.

His philosophy of life meant that even after the catastrophic event of the stroke, it did not mean an end to living and he found other opportunities which he grasped enthusiastically.

So many people were amazed and inspired by Dad for what he achieved. He was one of life’s cheerleaders always encouraging and supporting others to fulfil their ambitions and this is what we will take with us. When we are not sure in our lives going forward we know we will think ‘What would Brian / Dad / Grandad say’. He had many sayings which we will remember and whenever anyone was facing difficulties or challenges, he would say ‘You will be alright’, and we will be alright because he has have taught us to be so.

Above all he will be remembered for his sense of humour, his huge sense of purpose and service to others and for the determination to live life to the full and never be stopped by anything or anyone. He was so proud of his family and all they have achieved. He was an inspiration and encouragement to everyone he met.

This is the final page of Dad’s life, but it is not the end. Everyone who’s life Dad touched, and all the people present here today carries a little bit of him with them, his humour, his smile, his sayings, his tenacity. So, he will live on with all of us, it is a fond farewell and not a goodbye.”
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Train ticket 28/05/97 (also from 1st website)
Since the Community Psychiatric Nursing (Cert.) course in the 1980s and our initial interview 28th May 1997, Brian and I met on about ten occasions. As noted above, Brian enjoyed rail travel and in the interview I had this image of a train with thought bubbles - Brian's reflections with the model taking shape.

Image from 1st archived site
Brian’s passing and his family's observations prompted recollection of a trip to London in 1996; to an IEE Colloquium on Thinking with Diagrams (Digest No: 1996/010).

https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/xpl/conhome/5214/proceeding

I’m sure Brian met me there, demonstrating his independence, motivation and enthusiasm. I need to check but I’m fairly sure, even imagining he said he was meeting Sarah afterwards? My father accompanied me, we stayed with an aunt who lived near London Bridge back then. Happy memories for me too.

Brian knew of several sites across the UK, that used or took an interest in Hodges’ model. When the website went live in 1998, I’d hoped people with notes, insights, examples of application, pros and cons would come forward. Sadly this did not happen except for a few instances.

I’m so pleased to have met Brian and being able to carry his model forward. Even semi-retired, I rejoice in the freedom I have as a practitioner. As I believe Brian came up against many academic barriers in trying to validate, publicise and disseminate the model. There was no expressed cynicism in this however, but political realism about how the world – academia works. A lesson I know very well in trying to publish work.

I keep fretting about not completing the ‘new’ website, but perhaps I’m following Brian’s advice after all: “focus on what you can do”. Despite its limitations the blog is helping to spread awareness of Hodges’ model; learning each year of new publications citing the model. Hodges’ model isn’t just another 2x2 matrix—business/management consultancy style thinking tool.

The key is the model’s full title:

Hodges' Health Career - Care Domains - Model

‘Health career’ refers to ‘life chances’ and this was central to Brian’s values of person-centredness, advocacy, and ‘seeing’ the political in health, social care and his own educational development and health career. 

The work remains to take Hodges’ model forward, to pass on this ‘+’ shaped baton. I will reflect further, especially as I was initially determined to ensure that Hodges' model was not just left on the shelf. For me, Brian’s legacy is the increasing relevance of his eponymous model since its creation. Consider since the late 1980s developments in human rights, consent, mental capacity, safeguarding, protection of liberty, mental health act, prison health. Brian's model readily encompasses the person and the State - nationally and globally, access and provision to health services, primary care, sustainable development goals, the determinants of health. How do we switch from illness-directed to preventive, health educational services?

In addition, Hodges' model can conceptually represent all these - across time as a series of frames. Brian's model remains a gift to his students and today's learners; including, patients, carers, mental health and general nurses, district nurses, learning disability and health visitors. As suggested here - Brian's effort and work has proved a great gift to me (as friends, family and many student nurses on placement, mentored, signed-off will attest). Brian's model is not a be all and end all, he knew this. It is one of many tools, models and theories, but it can and must also help future generations: from self care, health care, to global health and planetary care.

Thank you Brian. RIP.