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Finding and engaging patients and the public to work collaboratively on an acute infection microbiology research public panel

PLAIN ENGLISH SUMMARY: In 2015 a microbiology team in Bristol joined a European research project that aims to develop new antibiotics to fight drug resistant infections. The microbiology team were convinced of the benefits of patient and public involvement, but had found it difficult to find former...

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Autores principales: Grier, Sally, Evans, David, Gibson, Andy, Chin, Teh Li, Stoddart, Margaret, Kok, Michele, Campbell, Richard, Kenny, Val, MacGowan, Alasdair
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5787913/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29423276
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s40900-018-0083-5
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author Grier, Sally
Evans, David
Gibson, Andy
Chin, Teh Li
Stoddart, Margaret
Kok, Michele
Campbell, Richard
Kenny, Val
MacGowan, Alasdair
author_facet Grier, Sally
Evans, David
Gibson, Andy
Chin, Teh Li
Stoddart, Margaret
Kok, Michele
Campbell, Richard
Kenny, Val
MacGowan, Alasdair
author_sort Grier, Sally
collection PubMed
description PLAIN ENGLISH SUMMARY: In 2015 a microbiology team in Bristol joined a European research project that aims to develop new antibiotics to fight drug resistant infections. The microbiology team were convinced of the benefits of patient and public involvement, but had found it difficult to find former patients to work with on earlier microbiology research. This paper describes how the team overcame this challenge to successfully recruit a PPI panel to develop PPI within the European project. The advice from people with experience in public involvement was to decide what criteria were desirable for panel membership, think about what the work of the panel might involve and how long the project will go on. The team decided that experience of suffering a serious acute infection would qualify people to comment on this project. Next, the team needed to identify ways of finding people to join the PPI panel. The microbiology research team tried different ways to approach potential panel members. These included distributing flyers at public research events, sending emails to potentially interested people, posting a message on the hospital Facebook page and approaching eligible people known to the team. A direct approach was the most successful method – either by email, mail or in person. Ultimately 16 people were selected to form the panel. Key factors for success were planning what the work of the panel might be, perseverance despite early lack of success, and one person having overall responsibility for setting up the panel, with the support of the whole team. ABSTRACT: Background In 2015 the microbiology research team became involved in a large European programme of research aiming to bring new antimicrobial drugs onto the market to combat the increasing problem of multi-drug resistant infection. With the purpose of developing patient and public involvement (PPI) in this project, the team decided to recruit a PPI panel to work with. The microbiology team had previously worked with a PPI panel on other research, but had found it difficult to recruit members. Methods Steps taken to recruit the panel were as follows: Advice was sought from people experienced in co-ordinating public involvement in research. One person in the team had overall responsibility but the whole research team was committed and met regularly. Two of the team undertook training in group facilitation and connecting with the public. Decisions were made about the criteria for inclusion into the panel, what tasks we envisaged for the panel, the length of and frequency of meetings. Advertising the involvement opportunity through flyers, social media, emails and direct contact with possible panel recruits known to the research team. Relevant documents such as a Role Profile and expression of interest form were drafted. An initial public meeting was planned for all who had shown interest in the panel. The expression of interest form was used for us to select as broad a group as possible.. Results Two out of three people who were approached directly and known by team members expressed interest in joining the panel (66%). Three out of seven members of a former panel were next (43%), then 10 out of 25 spinal infection clinic patients (40%), and finally 12 people responded to an email sent to 1261 foundation trust members (1%). No-one who was approached by indirect methods e.g. flyers or advertising on Facebook, expressed interest in the panel. Sixteen people were eventually selected for the panel. Conclusions It is possible to recruit a patient and public involvement panel for research in a discipline as challenging as microbiology. Good planning and the commitment of the research team were key to success.
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spelling pubmed-57879132018-02-08 Finding and engaging patients and the public to work collaboratively on an acute infection microbiology research public panel Grier, Sally Evans, David Gibson, Andy Chin, Teh Li Stoddart, Margaret Kok, Michele Campbell, Richard Kenny, Val MacGowan, Alasdair Res Involv Engagem Methodology PLAIN ENGLISH SUMMARY: In 2015 a microbiology team in Bristol joined a European research project that aims to develop new antibiotics to fight drug resistant infections. The microbiology team were convinced of the benefits of patient and public involvement, but had found it difficult to find former patients to work with on earlier microbiology research. This paper describes how the team overcame this challenge to successfully recruit a PPI panel to develop PPI within the European project. The advice from people with experience in public involvement was to decide what criteria were desirable for panel membership, think about what the work of the panel might involve and how long the project will go on. The team decided that experience of suffering a serious acute infection would qualify people to comment on this project. Next, the team needed to identify ways of finding people to join the PPI panel. The microbiology research team tried different ways to approach potential panel members. These included distributing flyers at public research events, sending emails to potentially interested people, posting a message on the hospital Facebook page and approaching eligible people known to the team. A direct approach was the most successful method – either by email, mail or in person. Ultimately 16 people were selected to form the panel. Key factors for success were planning what the work of the panel might be, perseverance despite early lack of success, and one person having overall responsibility for setting up the panel, with the support of the whole team. ABSTRACT: Background In 2015 the microbiology research team became involved in a large European programme of research aiming to bring new antimicrobial drugs onto the market to combat the increasing problem of multi-drug resistant infection. With the purpose of developing patient and public involvement (PPI) in this project, the team decided to recruit a PPI panel to work with. The microbiology team had previously worked with a PPI panel on other research, but had found it difficult to recruit members. Methods Steps taken to recruit the panel were as follows: Advice was sought from people experienced in co-ordinating public involvement in research. One person in the team had overall responsibility but the whole research team was committed and met regularly. Two of the team undertook training in group facilitation and connecting with the public. Decisions were made about the criteria for inclusion into the panel, what tasks we envisaged for the panel, the length of and frequency of meetings. Advertising the involvement opportunity through flyers, social media, emails and direct contact with possible panel recruits known to the research team. Relevant documents such as a Role Profile and expression of interest form were drafted. An initial public meeting was planned for all who had shown interest in the panel. The expression of interest form was used for us to select as broad a group as possible.. Results Two out of three people who were approached directly and known by team members expressed interest in joining the panel (66%). Three out of seven members of a former panel were next (43%), then 10 out of 25 spinal infection clinic patients (40%), and finally 12 people responded to an email sent to 1261 foundation trust members (1%). No-one who was approached by indirect methods e.g. flyers or advertising on Facebook, expressed interest in the panel. Sixteen people were eventually selected for the panel. Conclusions It is possible to recruit a patient and public involvement panel for research in a discipline as challenging as microbiology. Good planning and the commitment of the research team were key to success. BioMed Central 2018-01-29 /pmc/articles/PMC5787913/ /pubmed/29423276 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s40900-018-0083-5 Text en © The Author(s). 2018 Open AccessThis article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated.
spellingShingle Methodology
Grier, Sally
Evans, David
Gibson, Andy
Chin, Teh Li
Stoddart, Margaret
Kok, Michele
Campbell, Richard
Kenny, Val
MacGowan, Alasdair
Finding and engaging patients and the public to work collaboratively on an acute infection microbiology research public panel
title Finding and engaging patients and the public to work collaboratively on an acute infection microbiology research public panel
title_full Finding and engaging patients and the public to work collaboratively on an acute infection microbiology research public panel
title_fullStr Finding and engaging patients and the public to work collaboratively on an acute infection microbiology research public panel
title_full_unstemmed Finding and engaging patients and the public to work collaboratively on an acute infection microbiology research public panel
title_short Finding and engaging patients and the public to work collaboratively on an acute infection microbiology research public panel
title_sort finding and engaging patients and the public to work collaboratively on an acute infection microbiology research public panel
topic Methodology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5787913/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29423276
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s40900-018-0083-5
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