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Starting a collaborative research impact assessment: a tale of two research funders

Starting a collaborative research impact assessment: a tale of two research funders
Starting a collaborative research impact assessment: a tale of two research funders
The National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) and Marie Curie are the two largest funders of end of life care research in the UK. NIHR and Marie Curie enable and support research at different times of the translational pathway, or by co-funding research. Undertaking a research impact assessment (RIA) on our combined investment is important to make the case for continued investment research and to be accountable to our stakeholders (Morgan Jones and Grant, 2013). RIA is a developing field (Adam et al., 2018). To ensure our approach is relevant, we have involved people with experience of end of life care. We hope that by undertaking this process together, we will gain a better understanding of the research funding landscape and its interdependencies in this area, identify gaps and opportunities, and learn from and support each other. We believe that our project marks the first time that a collaborative RIA of this kind has been undertaken by research funders. We hope that by exchanging, reflecting and sharing our experiences, lessons learned and approach, it will aid discussion, promote shared learning and transparency around funders’ impact assessment processes and may help future collaborative projects. Our learning so far:

· Appropriate oversight, governance and data sharing is a must
· Identify organisational risks up front
· Review organisational factors including resource which may impact on capacity to deliver
· Use of similar tools for data collection enables joint analysis and efficient of data
· collection
· A clear and shared understanding of the project scope is important
Lakin, Kay
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Thakrar, Sanjay
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Vaughan, Claire
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Best, Sabine
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Lockwood, Adam
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Simons, Howard
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Chatland, Laura
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Thomas, Sarah
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Watson, Sam
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Ahmedzai, Sam
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Anwar, Shamaila
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Lakin, Kay
2b7385b3-6147-4d47-becb-109c8737cbaa
Thakrar, Sanjay
706d214e-a52a-4741-8abd-e7876a5bd07a
Vaughan, Claire
e3c1c2a1-8713-48fb-86a8-590f1947a0ab
Best, Sabine
189b3481-9245-4306-b5a3-9edbcc60f9cb
Lockwood, Adam
99761b6a-9ff0-4e89-8498-44783712eb55
Simons, Howard
88bf7ad4-4a0e-4f0a-ba2d-ffb648c7d081
Chatland, Laura
1cf57c84-ccdd-4fbf-bff9-57079e3714ab
Thomas, Sarah
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Watson, Sam
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Ahmedzai, Sam
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Anwar, Shamaila
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Lakin, Kay, Thakrar, Sanjay, Vaughan, Claire, Best, Sabine, Lockwood, Adam, Simons, Howard, Chatland, Laura, Thomas, Sarah, Watson, Sam, Ahmedzai, Sam and Anwar, Shamaila (2020) Starting a collaborative research impact assessment: a tale of two research funders. Marie Curie Palliative Care Research Conference 2019: Future directions of hospice care: IPU or ITU?, Royal Society of Medicine, London, United Kingdom. 14 Oct 2019. (doi:10.21955/amrcopenres.1114914.1).

Record type: Conference or Workshop Item (Poster)

Abstract

The National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) and Marie Curie are the two largest funders of end of life care research in the UK. NIHR and Marie Curie enable and support research at different times of the translational pathway, or by co-funding research. Undertaking a research impact assessment (RIA) on our combined investment is important to make the case for continued investment research and to be accountable to our stakeholders (Morgan Jones and Grant, 2013). RIA is a developing field (Adam et al., 2018). To ensure our approach is relevant, we have involved people with experience of end of life care. We hope that by undertaking this process together, we will gain a better understanding of the research funding landscape and its interdependencies in this area, identify gaps and opportunities, and learn from and support each other. We believe that our project marks the first time that a collaborative RIA of this kind has been undertaken by research funders. We hope that by exchanging, reflecting and sharing our experiences, lessons learned and approach, it will aid discussion, promote shared learning and transparency around funders’ impact assessment processes and may help future collaborative projects. Our learning so far:

· Appropriate oversight, governance and data sharing is a must
· Identify organisational risks up front
· Review organisational factors including resource which may impact on capacity to deliver
· Use of similar tools for data collection enables joint analysis and efficient of data
· collection
· A clear and shared understanding of the project scope is important

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More information

Published date: 15 January 2020
Venue - Dates: Marie Curie Palliative Care Research Conference 2019: Future directions of hospice care: IPU or ITU?, Royal Society of Medicine, London, United Kingdom, 2019-10-14 - 2019-10-14

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 437252
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/437252
PURE UUID: 5c517a81-63bd-4b61-ada6-212559a378be
ORCID for Kay Lakin: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-2241-5613
ORCID for Sarah Thomas: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-0541-4555

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 22 Jan 2020 17:33
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:40

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Contributors

Author: Kay Lakin ORCID iD
Author: Sanjay Thakrar
Author: Claire Vaughan
Author: Sabine Best
Author: Adam Lockwood
Author: Howard Simons
Author: Laura Chatland
Author: Sarah Thomas ORCID iD
Author: Sam Watson
Author: Sam Ahmedzai
Author: Shamaila Anwar

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