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Patient and public involvement and engagement (PPIE): how valuable and how hard? An evaluation of ALL_EARS@UoS PPIE group, 18 months on

Patient and public involvement and engagement (PPIE): how valuable and how hard? An evaluation of ALL_EARS@UoS PPIE group, 18 months on
Patient and public involvement and engagement (PPIE): how valuable and how hard? An evaluation of ALL_EARS@UoS PPIE group, 18 months on
Background: ALL_EARS@UoS is a patient and public involvement and engagement (PPIE) group for people with lived experience of hearing loss. The purpose of the group is to share experiences of hearing loss and hearing healthcare, inform research and improve services for patients at University of Southampton Auditory Implant Service. A year after inception, we wanted to critically reflect on the value and challenges of the group. Four members of ALL_EARS@UoS were recruited to an evaluation steering group. This paper reports the evaluation of the group using the UK Standards for Public Involvement.

Methods: an anonymous, mixed-methods questionnaire was co-designed and shared with members of ALL_EARS@UoS using an online platform. The questionnaire was designed to capture satisfaction, individual feedback through free-text answers, and demographic information. Descriptive statistics have been used to express the satisfaction and demographic data. Reflexive thematic analysis has been used to analyse the free-text responses. Group engagement and activity data over time were monitored and collected.

Results: the questionnaire response rate was 61% (11/18). Areas identified as strengths were ‘Communication’ and ‘Working together’. Five themes were developed from the thematic analysis; (1) Increased knowledge and awareness around the topic of hearing health for group members and wider society, (2) supporting research, (3) inclusivity within the group, (4) opportunity to make a difference for people in the future and (5) running of the group/group organisation. The data highlighted the value and challenges of PPIE. Members described feeling listened to and appreciation of being able to share experiences. Time of day and meeting format were identified as challenges as they affected who could attend the meetings. The ability to secure and maintain sufficient funding and time to support inclusive and diverse PPIE activities is a challenge for researchers.

Conclusions: we have identified how PPIE added value to both group members and researchers, emphasising the true benefit of PPIE. We have highlighted challenges we are facing and our plan to tackle these. We aim to continue to develop and sustain a group that reflects the diversity of the Deaf/deaf or hard of hearing community and of our local community.
Patient and public involvement, Evaluation, Hearing loss, Audiology, Community engagement, Standards
2056-7529
Hough, Kate
81d8630c-6e02-4bea-858a-377717476f6e
Grasmeder, Mary
206e6b44-d1cd-43f5-99ac-588ab02d44ef
Parsons, Heather
d9a016e2-fab9-44ae-a4fa-acbcccca8900
Jones, William
cda7c748-e307-4a05-b192-7639b16a72cf
Smith, Sarah
58bfd4c3-7959-4e6d-95c3-65b31b0dca13
Satchwell, Christopher John
4b2af3d9-6766-4351-a06b-0b8b9fe79385
Hobday, Ian
a59021c9-05aa-443c-8e36-363d72deb404
Taylor, Sarah
9f20f18a-4824-4df2-8c19-d0aa9b133ee0
Newman, Tracey
322290cb-2e9c-445d-a047-00b1bea39a25
Hough, Kate
81d8630c-6e02-4bea-858a-377717476f6e
Grasmeder, Mary
206e6b44-d1cd-43f5-99ac-588ab02d44ef
Parsons, Heather
d9a016e2-fab9-44ae-a4fa-acbcccca8900
Jones, William
cda7c748-e307-4a05-b192-7639b16a72cf
Smith, Sarah
58bfd4c3-7959-4e6d-95c3-65b31b0dca13
Satchwell, Christopher John
4b2af3d9-6766-4351-a06b-0b8b9fe79385
Hobday, Ian
a59021c9-05aa-443c-8e36-363d72deb404
Taylor, Sarah
9f20f18a-4824-4df2-8c19-d0aa9b133ee0
Newman, Tracey
322290cb-2e9c-445d-a047-00b1bea39a25

Hough, Kate, Grasmeder, Mary, Parsons, Heather, Jones, William, Smith, Sarah, Satchwell, Christopher John, Hobday, Ian, Taylor, Sarah and Newman, Tracey (2024) Patient and public involvement and engagement (PPIE): how valuable and how hard? An evaluation of ALL_EARS@UoS PPIE group, 18 months on. Research Involvement and Engagement. (doi:10.21203/rs.3.rs-3848030/v1). (In Press)

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: ALL_EARS@UoS is a patient and public involvement and engagement (PPIE) group for people with lived experience of hearing loss. The purpose of the group is to share experiences of hearing loss and hearing healthcare, inform research and improve services for patients at University of Southampton Auditory Implant Service. A year after inception, we wanted to critically reflect on the value and challenges of the group. Four members of ALL_EARS@UoS were recruited to an evaluation steering group. This paper reports the evaluation of the group using the UK Standards for Public Involvement.

Methods: an anonymous, mixed-methods questionnaire was co-designed and shared with members of ALL_EARS@UoS using an online platform. The questionnaire was designed to capture satisfaction, individual feedback through free-text answers, and demographic information. Descriptive statistics have been used to express the satisfaction and demographic data. Reflexive thematic analysis has been used to analyse the free-text responses. Group engagement and activity data over time were monitored and collected.

Results: the questionnaire response rate was 61% (11/18). Areas identified as strengths were ‘Communication’ and ‘Working together’. Five themes were developed from the thematic analysis; (1) Increased knowledge and awareness around the topic of hearing health for group members and wider society, (2) supporting research, (3) inclusivity within the group, (4) opportunity to make a difference for people in the future and (5) running of the group/group organisation. The data highlighted the value and challenges of PPIE. Members described feeling listened to and appreciation of being able to share experiences. Time of day and meeting format were identified as challenges as they affected who could attend the meetings. The ability to secure and maintain sufficient funding and time to support inclusive and diverse PPIE activities is a challenge for researchers.

Conclusions: we have identified how PPIE added value to both group members and researchers, emphasising the true benefit of PPIE. We have highlighted challenges we are facing and our plan to tackle these. We aim to continue to develop and sustain a group that reflects the diversity of the Deaf/deaf or hard of hearing community and of our local community.

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Submitted date: 12 January 2024
Accepted/In Press date: 19 March 2024
Keywords: Patient and public involvement, Evaluation, Hearing loss, Audiology, Community engagement, Standards

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 487257
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/487257
ISSN: 2056-7529
PURE UUID: 4de4b94b-3003-4ede-a25a-9ec2df5285d6
ORCID for Kate Hough: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-5160-2517
ORCID for Tracey Newman: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-3727-9258

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 16 Feb 2024 17:14
Last modified: 24 Apr 2024 02:04

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Contributors

Author: Kate Hough ORCID iD
Author: Mary Grasmeder
Author: Heather Parsons
Author: William Jones
Author: Sarah Smith
Author: Christopher John Satchwell
Author: Ian Hobday
Author: Sarah Taylor
Author: Tracey Newman ORCID iD

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