Abrehart Nichola, Frost Kate, Harris Roy, Wragg Andrew, Stewart Derek, Sharif Hayfa, Matthews Rachel, Marciani Luca
Nottingham Digestive Diseases Centre and National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Nottingham Biomedical Research Centre, Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust and University of Nottingham, Nottingham, NG7 2UH, UK.
Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust, Nottingham, NG7 2UH, UK.
Res Involv Engagem. 2021 Jan 6;7(1):2. doi: 10.1186/s40900-020-00243-0.
There is often a great urgency to be inclusive when conducting research and to focus efforts with groups and communities that can be referred to as marginalised. This is especially the case in research concerning medical devices aimed at children and young people (CYP). Although involvement methodology has developed over the last two decades, it can be challenging to involve and engage CYP with confidence and clarity of purpose.
Our aim was to provide a reflective narrative account of the involvement of CYP, over a period of 5 years, in a research project from conception of a new paediatric medical device through to practical application. We explored a model of patient and public involvement (PPI) through the Nottingham Young Persons Advisory Group (YPAG), part of the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) GenerationR Alliance, in a NIHR funded research project. The YPAG designed and created a model of the human gut, co-designed the Transicap™ mini-capsules and their packaging, co-produced patient information sheets, came up with the idea to disseminate through a project website and co-wrote and created animation videos. The YPAG involvement continued through the writing and award of the follow-on research grant (MAGIC2). During this process the YPAG modified the clinical study protocol insisting that all participants in the control arm were given the imaging test results as well, save for a delayed reading compared to the intervention arm.
Involvement of the YPAG over the last 5 years, led to the development of a mutually beneficial partnership, enabling genuine knowledge exchange between researchers and CYP. This influenced the design, plans and actions of the MAGIC study and well into the subsequent MAGIC2 follow-on project. Moreover, these involvement models applied within a feasibility study setting, have enhanced the realism and pragmatism of the study, contributing to the project's overall success.
在开展研究时,通常迫切需要做到包容性,并将精力集中于那些可被视为边缘化的群体和社区。在针对儿童和青少年(CYP)的医疗设备研究中尤其如此。尽管参与方法在过去二十年中有所发展,但要让CYP充满信心且目标明确地参与进来可能具有挑战性。
我们的目标是对CYP在一个为期5年的研究项目中的参与情况进行反思性叙述,该项目从一种新型儿科医疗设备的构思到实际应用。我们通过诺丁汉青年咨询小组(YPAG)探索了患者和公众参与(PPI)模式,该小组是国家卫生研究院(NIHR)GenerationR联盟的一部分,参与了一项由NIHR资助的研究项目。YPAG设计并制作了人体肠道模型,共同设计了Transicap™微型胶囊及其包装,共同制作了患者信息表,提出通过项目网站进行传播的想法,并共同撰写和制作了动画视频。YPAG的参与一直持续到后续研究资助(MAGIC2)的撰写和获批过程中。在此过程中,YPAG修改了临床研究方案,坚持要求对照组的所有参与者也都能获得影像检查结果,只是与干预组相比阅读结果会延迟。
过去5年YPAG的参与促成了一种互利的伙伴关系,实现了研究人员与CYP之间真正的知识交流。这影响了MAGIC研究的设计、计划和行动,以及后续的MAGIC2后续项目。此外,在可行性研究环境中应用的这些参与模式增强了研究的现实性和实用性,为项目的整体成功做出了贡献。