Nicoline Vackerberg

Doctoral Student
Lecturer

Nicoline Vackerberg, RPt MSc, Phd candidate. Coordinator Esther network international, Quality manager Region Jönköping Län,Adjunct Jönköping Academy.

Nicoline graduated as a physiotherapist in the Netherlands 1982 and has subsequently worked in several European and Asian countries. She has worked in primary care, hospital care and community care services as a physiotherapist, manager and quality improvement leader and got a good understanding of the whole health care system and the different needs of the patients in the care chain. This was followed by a period of project leading including several collaborative projects to strengthen the care chain. She has a master degree in Quality improvement in Health and Social care, and combines her work as coordinator of the Esther network international with university faculty.

At the university she is the lead for Coaching Quality Improvement and the practical year where all the master students have to complete a quality improvement project in there own working place.

 
Esther is a network for promoting and developing complex care. The network continuously improves the cooperation between the different care providers to the best for Esther. All in Co -production with Esther self. In the network there are about 300 Esther coaches to facilitate this collaboration and improvement efforts. www.plus.rjl.se/esther

 

 

Article

Kirvalidze, M. Boström, A. Liljas, A. Doheny, M. Hendry, A. McCormack, B. , ... Calderón-Larrañaga A. (2024). Effectiveness of integrated person-centered interventions for older people's care: Review of Swedish experiences and experts’ perspective. More information
Mulvale, G. Green, J. Robert, G. Larkin, M. Vackerberg, N. Kjellström, S. , ... Craythorne S. (2024). Adopting, implementing and assimilating coproduced health and social care innovations involving structurally vulnerable populations: findings from a longitudinal, multiple case study design in Canada, Scotland and Sweden Health Research Policy and Systems, 22(1). More information
Vackerberg, N., Andersson, A., Peterson, A., Karltun, A. (2023). What is best for Esther? A simple question that moves mindsets and improves care BMC Health Services Research, 23(1), 1-16. More information
Vackerberg, N., Andersson, A. (2022). Commentary: Bridging the silos: A comparative analysis of Implementation Science and Improvement Science Frontiers in Health Services, 2. More information
Ärleskog, C., Vackerberg, N., Andersson, A. (2021). Balancing power in co-production: introducing a reflection model Humanities and Social Sciences Communications, 8(1). More information
Vackerberg, N., Levander, M., Thor, J. (2016). What is best for Esther? Building improvement coaching capacity with and for users in health and social Care-A case study Quality Management in Health Care, 25(1), 53-60. More information

Book chapter

Goldgruber, J., Vackerberg, N., Hartinger, G. (2023). ESTHER-Thinking in der (integrierten) Gesundheitsversorgung – Ein radikaler Ansatz für mehr Customer Centricity. In: E. Benning-Rohnke, J. Hasebrook & M. Pütz (Ed.), Kunden begeistern: Konzepte und Praxisberichte aus Finance, Automotive und Gesundheit (pp. 229 -245). Wiesbaden: Springer More information
Vackerberg, N., Norman, A., Jutterdal, S., Thor, J. (2015). Utveckling och förbättringsarbete är ömsesidigt beroende och berikande. In: Gabriele Biguet, Ingrid Lindquist, Cathrin Martin, Anna Pettersson (Ed.), Att lära och utvecklas i sin profession (pp. 169 -185). Lund: Studentlitteratur AB More information

Other publications

Mulvale, G. Green, J. Robert, G. Larkin, M. Vackerberg, N. Kjellström, S. , ... Craythorne S. (2023). Adopting, implementing, and assimilating heath and social care innovations coproduced with structurally vulnerable populations: Findings from a longitudinal, multiple case study design in three countries. More information