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Patient involvement in research:what is the evidence and the scope of patient and public involvement in musculoskeletal research ?

Patient involvement in research:what is the evidence and the scope of patient and public involvement in musculoskeletal research ?
Patient involvement in research:what is the evidence and the scope of patient and public involvement in musculoskeletal research ?
Background
Close co-operation with service users is now understood as essential for the development of evidence-based care in government guidance. Collaborations are likely to be most rewarding in long-term conditions where significant partnerships are commonly established between service users and health professionals over time. To involve patients and the public in helping to design, develop and disseminate research is recognised to improve clinical research through providing a fresh approach to investigations, improve recruitment to research studies, develop novel outcomes and better inform study designs. Different stages and levels in the research process exist.


Session 1: Title: Patient Involvement in research what is the evidence and the scope of PPI in MSK research. Heidi Lempp and Jo Adams

This presentation provides the background to the occurrence and evidence for the effectiveness of Patient and Public Involvement in research in designing more successful and relevant research projects. It provides examples of successful PPI strategies from two perspectives. The first provides examples from individual research projects showing how patients and service users can be involved in setting priorities for research agendas, agreeing trial intervention packages, designing active and placebo intervention components and contributing towards dissemination and publication of research findings. Simple strategies to maximise, maintain and acknowledge PPI input are explored. The second provides example from a national approach to embedding PPI across the Arthritis Research UK Centre of Excellence for Sport, Exercise and Osteoarthritis. Training and support for both PPI representatives and clinical academics is crucial. Some of the challenges involved in establishing and developing PPI strategies across multi disciplinary research are discussed and feedback provided on useful strategies to support on going engagement.
1462-0324
p.i7
Adams, Jo
6e38b8bb-9467-4585-86e4-14062b02bcba
Lempp, Heidi
056495e2-60ac-4e9d-b795-fbefd9c8c126
Adams, Jo
6e38b8bb-9467-4585-86e4-14062b02bcba
Lempp, Heidi
056495e2-60ac-4e9d-b795-fbefd9c8c126

Adams, Jo and Lempp, Heidi (2014) Patient involvement in research:what is the evidence and the scope of patient and public involvement in musculoskeletal research ? Rheumatology, 53 (S1), p.i7. (doi:10.1093/rheumatology/keu052.001).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background
Close co-operation with service users is now understood as essential for the development of evidence-based care in government guidance. Collaborations are likely to be most rewarding in long-term conditions where significant partnerships are commonly established between service users and health professionals over time. To involve patients and the public in helping to design, develop and disseminate research is recognised to improve clinical research through providing a fresh approach to investigations, improve recruitment to research studies, develop novel outcomes and better inform study designs. Different stages and levels in the research process exist.


Session 1: Title: Patient Involvement in research what is the evidence and the scope of PPI in MSK research. Heidi Lempp and Jo Adams

This presentation provides the background to the occurrence and evidence for the effectiveness of Patient and Public Involvement in research in designing more successful and relevant research projects. It provides examples of successful PPI strategies from two perspectives. The first provides examples from individual research projects showing how patients and service users can be involved in setting priorities for research agendas, agreeing trial intervention packages, designing active and placebo intervention components and contributing towards dissemination and publication of research findings. Simple strategies to maximise, maintain and acknowledge PPI input are explored. The second provides example from a national approach to embedding PPI across the Arthritis Research UK Centre of Excellence for Sport, Exercise and Osteoarthritis. Training and support for both PPI representatives and clinical academics is crucial. Some of the challenges involved in establishing and developing PPI strategies across multi disciplinary research are discussed and feedback provided on useful strategies to support on going engagement.

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More information

Published date: 30 April 2014
Organisations: Physical & Rehabilitation Health

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 364667
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/364667
ISSN: 1462-0324
PURE UUID: 18086775-55f8-46c1-a2ab-b483e41eeb71
ORCID for Jo Adams: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-1765-7060

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 07 May 2014 17:00
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 02:49

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Contributors

Author: Jo Adams ORCID iD
Author: Heidi Lempp

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