Snow R, Crocker J C, Crowe S
Health Experiences Institute, Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK.
NIHR Oxford Biomedical Research Centre, Oxford, UK.
Res Involv Engagem. 2015 Aug 4;1:7. doi: 10.1186/s40900-015-0007-6. eCollection 2015.
Healthcare workers want to listen more to patients and their carers in all sorts of areas of healthcare. This can include choosing topics for medical research. We looked at how patients and carers have helped to choose topics for research about type I diabetes. We aimed to find out if, and why, researchers often rejected their choices. We looked at a project which brought together patients, carers and healthcare workers to choose topics for research about type 1 diabetes. The group first asked patients, carers and healthcare workers to suggest ideas for research questions. But the group had to follow rules about what counted as a good research question. Some people's ideas did not count as good research questions, and they were rejected at the start. We looked at who were most likely to have their ideas rejected at the start. We found that patients and carers were most likely to have a suggestion rejected. Then we looked at the rejected questions in detail. They were mostly about curing diabetes, preventing diabetes and understanding how diabetes works. There were also some questions about access to medicines and the quality of care. Researchers should ask patients and carers for help deciding what counts as a good research question from the start of projects like these. We should also think about what might be getting in the way of patients and carers making more of a difference in research.
Patients and carers are increasingly involved in deciding on topics for medical research. However, so far, it has been difficult to gain an accurate picture of the impact of such involvement because of poor reporting and evaluation in published studies to date. This study aimed to explore how a partnership of patients, carers, healthcare professionals and organisations identified questions for future research and why patients and carers had a limited impact on this process. In the first stage of the partnership process, relevant service users and providers (including patients, carers, healthcare professionals and voluntary organisations) were invited to submit suggested research questions about the treatment of type 1 diabetes, via a national online and paper survey. The partnership followed formal protocols that defined a researchable question. This meant that many respondents' suggested research questions were rejected at the start of the process. We analysed survey submissions to find out which groups of respondents were most likely to have their suggestions rejected and what these suggestions were about. Five hundred eighty-three respondents submitted 1143 suggested research questions, of which 249 (21.8 %) were rejected at the first stage. Respondents with lived experience of this long-term condition (patients and carers) were more likely than those without lived experience to submit a research question that would be rejected (35.6 vs. 16.5 %; < 0.0005). Among the rejected questions submitted by patients and carers, there were several key themes: questions about cure, cause and prevention, understanding the disease, healthcare policy and economics. In this case study, early decisions about what constituted a researchable question restricted patients' and carers' contributions to priority setting. When discussions about a project's remit take place before service users are involved, researchers risk distorting the potential impact of involvement. Impact assessments should consider not only the differences patients and carers make to research but also the differences they have made in the absence of systemic barriers. We recommend that initiatives aimed at involving patients and carers in identifying research questions involve them as early as possible, including in decisions about how and why suggested research questions are selected or rejected.
医护人员希望在医疗保健的各个领域更多地倾听患者及其护理人员的意见。这可以包括为医学研究选择课题。我们研究了患者和护理人员如何帮助选择关于1型糖尿病的研究课题。我们旨在找出研究人员是否以及为何经常拒绝他们的选择。我们考察了一个将患者、护理人员和医护人员聚集在一起以选择1型糖尿病研究课题的项目。该小组首先要求患者、护理人员和医护人员提出研究问题的想法。但该小组必须遵循关于什么算是一个好的研究问题的规则。有些人的想法不算好的研究问题,在一开始就被拒绝了。我们研究了谁最有可能在一开始就让自己的想法被拒绝。我们发现患者和护理人员的建议最有可能被拒绝。然后我们详细研究了被拒绝的问题。它们大多是关于治愈糖尿病、预防糖尿病以及了解糖尿病的发病机制。也有一些关于获得药物和护理质量的问题。研究人员应该从这类项目一开始就向患者和护理人员寻求帮助,以确定什么算是一个好的研究问题。我们还应该思考是什么可能阻碍患者和护理人员在研究中发挥更大作用。
患者和护理人员越来越多地参与到医学研究课题的决策中。然而,到目前为止,由于迄今为止已发表的研究报告和评估不佳,很难准确了解这种参与的影响。本研究旨在探讨患者、护理人员、医护专业人员和组织的合作关系如何确定未来研究的问题,以及为何患者和护理人员对这一过程的影响有限。在合作过程的第一阶段,相关的服务使用者和提供者(包括患者、护理人员、医护专业人员和志愿组织)被邀请通过全国性的在线和纸质调查,提交关于1型糖尿病治疗的建议研究问题。该合作遵循定义可研究问题的正式方案。这意味着许多受访者提出的研究问题在过程开始时就被拒绝了。我们分析了调查提交的内容,以找出哪些受访者群体的建议最有可能被拒绝,以及这些建议是关于什么的。583名受访者提交了1143个建议研究问题,其中249个(21.8%)在第一阶段被拒绝。有这种长期病症亲身经历的受访者(患者和护理人员)比没有亲身经历的受访者更有可能提交一个会被拒绝的研究问题(35.6%对16.5%;P<0.0005)。在患者和护理人员提交的被拒绝问题中,有几个关键主题:关于治愈、病因和预防、了解疾病、医疗保健政策和经济学的问题。在这个案例研究中,关于什么构成可研究问题的早期决定限制了患者和护理人员对确定优先事项的贡献。当在服务使用者参与之前就对项目的职权范围进行讨论时,研究人员有可能扭曲参与的潜在影响。影响评估不仅应考虑患者和护理人员对研究的影响,还应考虑在没有系统性障碍的情况下他们所产生的影响。我们建议,旨在让患者和护理人员参与确定研究问题的举措应尽早让他们参与,包括参与关于如何以及为何选择或拒绝建议研究问题的决策。