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Co-producing public involvement training with members of the public and research organisations in the East Midlands: creating, delivering and evaluating the lay assessor training programme

Co-producing public involvement training with members of the public and research organisations in the East Midlands: creating, delivering and evaluating the lay assessor training programme
Co-producing public involvement training with members of the public and research organisations in the East Midlands: creating, delivering and evaluating the lay assessor training programme
Plain english summary

Members of the public share their views with researchers to improve health and social care research. Lay assessing is one way of doing this. This is where people, drawing upon personal and general life experience, comment on material, such as grant applications and patient information, to highlight strengths and weaknesses and to suggest improvements. This paper reports on setting up a training programme for lay assessors.

Meetings were held between interested public and staff from research organisations. People discussed what lay assessing is, why they want to do it, skills and support needed and if training was wanted. They were invited to form a group to develop the training together. Training was delivered in the East Midlands. People who attended gave their thoughts about it by completing questionnaires and joining a feedback event.

The group developed the structure of the training programme together and it oversaw the development of the training content by individual members. People who attended training reported feeling more confident about lay assessing. This was particularly so for those who had not done lay assessing before. They indicated how valuable it was to talk with others at the training. Our findings support the National Institute for Health Research recommendations for improving learning and development for public involvement in research.

This project has created a solid base for local research organisations to work together in public involvement training. Lay assessor training is now part of a wider programme of shared resources called the Sharebank.

Abstract

Background

Involving members of the public in research can improve its quality and incorporate the needs and views of patients. One method for doing this is lay assessing, where members of the public are consulted to improve research materials. This paper documents the establishment of a pilot training programme for lay assessors. It describes a way of working that embodies a regional, cross-organisational approach to co-producing training with members of the public.

Methods

Open meetings, led by AH, were held for existing and aspiring lay assessors to define lay assessing, motivations for doing it, skills required, associated learning and development needs, and to gauge interest for training. Those who attended meetings, including members of the public and staff, were invited to form a working group to co-produce the training programme. Training was delivered in modules at two centres in the East Midlands and evaluated through participant feedback at the end of each module and at an evaluation event. Feedback was through a mix of Likert scale scoring, open text and verbal responses.

Results

Discussions from the open meetings informed the development of the training by the working group. Led by AH, the working group, as a whole, co-produced the structure and format of the training and oversaw training content development by individuals within the group. Training was well-received by participants. Feedback through Likert scoring (n = 14) indicated higher feelings of confidence in knowledge of relevant subject matter and in fulfilling the lay assessor role, particularly amongst those who had not done lay assessing before. Opportunities that the training afforded for interaction between participants – sharing of varied experiences and knowledge – and a ‘learn by doing’ approach was of particular value, as indicated by 10 responses to open-ended questions.

Conclusions

This project has created a solid foundation for collaboration between research organisations in the East Midlands in devising and delivering training in public involvement together. Our evaluation provides evidence in support of National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) recommendations on principles for learning and development for public involvement in research.
Public , Co-production, Lay assesor, Reviewing research, Training, Cross-organisational, Regional, Involvement
2056-7529
Horobin, Adele
e708ec81-cf21-4870-9d1d-6794aa77ad42
Wray, Paula
15cd76a1-9cfc-4dd7-b4b9-f12911702e29
Walker, Dawn-Marie
5d4c78b7-4411-493e-8844-b64efc72a1e8
Higton, Fred
ce56a0b7-b561-4716-a098-b64cf421b215
Vanhegan, Stevie
8a2f0e6a-2571-49fe-beb6-2be8abb76e66
Brown, George
8711d092-0234-4425-80a0-62847b184321
Wragg, Andy
2457f209-ba26-477f-b97f-6c02c64b81b8
Horobin, Adele
e708ec81-cf21-4870-9d1d-6794aa77ad42
Wray, Paula
15cd76a1-9cfc-4dd7-b4b9-f12911702e29
Walker, Dawn-Marie
5d4c78b7-4411-493e-8844-b64efc72a1e8
Higton, Fred
ce56a0b7-b561-4716-a098-b64cf421b215
Vanhegan, Stevie
8a2f0e6a-2571-49fe-beb6-2be8abb76e66
Brown, George
8711d092-0234-4425-80a0-62847b184321
Wragg, Andy
2457f209-ba26-477f-b97f-6c02c64b81b8

Horobin, Adele, Wray, Paula, Walker, Dawn-Marie, Higton, Fred, Vanhegan, Stevie, Brown, George and Wragg, Andy (2017) Co-producing public involvement training with members of the public and research organisations in the East Midlands: creating, delivering and evaluating the lay assessor training programme. Research Involvement and Engagement, 3 (7). (doi:10.1186/s40900-017-0056-0).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Plain english summary

Members of the public share their views with researchers to improve health and social care research. Lay assessing is one way of doing this. This is where people, drawing upon personal and general life experience, comment on material, such as grant applications and patient information, to highlight strengths and weaknesses and to suggest improvements. This paper reports on setting up a training programme for lay assessors.

Meetings were held between interested public and staff from research organisations. People discussed what lay assessing is, why they want to do it, skills and support needed and if training was wanted. They were invited to form a group to develop the training together. Training was delivered in the East Midlands. People who attended gave their thoughts about it by completing questionnaires and joining a feedback event.

The group developed the structure of the training programme together and it oversaw the development of the training content by individual members. People who attended training reported feeling more confident about lay assessing. This was particularly so for those who had not done lay assessing before. They indicated how valuable it was to talk with others at the training. Our findings support the National Institute for Health Research recommendations for improving learning and development for public involvement in research.

This project has created a solid base for local research organisations to work together in public involvement training. Lay assessor training is now part of a wider programme of shared resources called the Sharebank.

Abstract

Background

Involving members of the public in research can improve its quality and incorporate the needs and views of patients. One method for doing this is lay assessing, where members of the public are consulted to improve research materials. This paper documents the establishment of a pilot training programme for lay assessors. It describes a way of working that embodies a regional, cross-organisational approach to co-producing training with members of the public.

Methods

Open meetings, led by AH, were held for existing and aspiring lay assessors to define lay assessing, motivations for doing it, skills required, associated learning and development needs, and to gauge interest for training. Those who attended meetings, including members of the public and staff, were invited to form a working group to co-produce the training programme. Training was delivered in modules at two centres in the East Midlands and evaluated through participant feedback at the end of each module and at an evaluation event. Feedback was through a mix of Likert scale scoring, open text and verbal responses.

Results

Discussions from the open meetings informed the development of the training by the working group. Led by AH, the working group, as a whole, co-produced the structure and format of the training and oversaw training content development by individuals within the group. Training was well-received by participants. Feedback through Likert scoring (n = 14) indicated higher feelings of confidence in knowledge of relevant subject matter and in fulfilling the lay assessor role, particularly amongst those who had not done lay assessing before. Opportunities that the training afforded for interaction between participants – sharing of varied experiences and knowledge – and a ‘learn by doing’ approach was of particular value, as indicated by 10 responses to open-ended questions.

Conclusions

This project has created a solid foundation for collaboration between research organisations in the East Midlands in devising and delivering training in public involvement together. Our evaluation provides evidence in support of National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) recommendations on principles for learning and development for public involvement in research.

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Horobin et al 2017 - Version of Record
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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 27 March 2017
e-pub ahead of print date: 5 April 2017
Published date: 5 April 2017
Keywords: Public , Co-production, Lay assesor, Reviewing research, Training, Cross-organisational, Regional, Involvement
Organisations: Researcher Development, INVOLVE

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 408638
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/408638
ISSN: 2056-7529
PURE UUID: 24558db1-0ea5-4280-8365-22b928ca7a0a
ORCID for Paula Wray: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-1233-6797
ORCID for Dawn-Marie Walker: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-2135-1363

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 25 May 2017 04:03
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 04:20

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Contributors

Author: Adele Horobin
Author: Paula Wray ORCID iD
Author: Dawn-Marie Walker ORCID iD
Author: Fred Higton
Author: Stevie Vanhegan
Author: George Brown
Author: Andy Wragg

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