Cargando…

Involving young people in BRIGHTLIGHT from study inception to secondary data analysis: insights from 10 years of user involvement

PLAIN ENGLISH SUMMARY: Young people with cancer are often described as ‘hard to reach’, ‘difficult to engage’ and/or ‘vulnerable’. Consequently, they are often over looked for patient and public involvement activities. We set out to involve young people with cancer to work as co-researchers in the d...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Taylor, Rachel M., Whelan, Jeremy S., Gibson, Faith, Morgan, Sue, Fern, Lorna A.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6307198/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30607259
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s40900-018-0135-x
_version_ 1783382951695745024
author Taylor, Rachel M.
Whelan, Jeremy S.
Gibson, Faith
Morgan, Sue
Fern, Lorna A.
author_facet Taylor, Rachel M.
Whelan, Jeremy S.
Gibson, Faith
Morgan, Sue
Fern, Lorna A.
author_sort Taylor, Rachel M.
collection PubMed
description PLAIN ENGLISH SUMMARY: Young people with cancer are often described as ‘hard to reach’, ‘difficult to engage’ and/or ‘vulnerable’. Consequently, they are often over looked for patient and public involvement activities. We set out to involve young people with cancer to work as co-researchers in the design of the largest ever study of young people with cancer, called BRIGHTLIGHT. In the 10 years since the BRIGHTLIGHT feasibility work began we have involved more than 1200 young people as co-researchers, collaborators, consultants and dissemination partners. We chronicle the key points of this 10-year journey, sharing our success, describing our challenges and the solutions we put in place; sharing also what worked and did not work. Here we share some of these experiences of involving young people in this research and offer some practical advice for those looking to do the same. ABSTRACT: Background Young people with cancer, broadly those aged 13–24 years at diagnosis, warrant special attention; physiological and psychological growth creates complex psychosocial needs which neither adult nor child systems are suitably designed to deal with. Resulting from these needs, they are often described as ‘vulnerable’, ‘hard to reach’ and ‘difficult to engage’, and consequently are often over looked for patient and public involvement/engagement (PPIE) roles. In our study ‘BRIGHTLIGHT’, we set out to evaluate whether specialist care for young people adds value, ensuring young people were central to our PPIE activities. We believe that BRIGHTLIGHT is unique as a very large study of young people with cancer which has successfully overcome the challenges of including young people in the research process so we are confident that they have influenced every aspect of study design, conduct and dissemination. Methods We chronicle a period of 10 years, over which we describe our approach and our methods to involving young people in PPIE activities in BRIGHTLIGHT. We describe the feasibility work, study set up, conduct and dissemination of our findings, and weave through our story of PPIE to illustrate its benefits. Through the narration of our experience we highlight significant points that both influenced and changed our direction of travel. We reflect on our experiences and offer some practical advice for those looking to do the same. Results In the 10 years since the BRIGHTLIGHT feasibility work began we have involved more than 1200 young people. Their contributions have been isolated and mapped over a 10-year period. We begin at an early step of identifying what research questions to prioritize, we then plot PPIE activities for one of these research priorities, place of care, which evolved into BRIGHTLIGHT. We document steps along the way to evidence the impact of this involvement. Conclusions Young people can make a valuable contribution to healthcare research given adequate support from the research team. Although some challenges exist, we propose that the benefits to young people, researchers and the study considerably outweigh these challenges and PPIE with young people should be integrated in all similar research studies.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-6307198
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2018
publisher BioMed Central
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-63071982019-01-03 Involving young people in BRIGHTLIGHT from study inception to secondary data analysis: insights from 10 years of user involvement Taylor, Rachel M. Whelan, Jeremy S. Gibson, Faith Morgan, Sue Fern, Lorna A. Res Involv Engagem Research Article PLAIN ENGLISH SUMMARY: Young people with cancer are often described as ‘hard to reach’, ‘difficult to engage’ and/or ‘vulnerable’. Consequently, they are often over looked for patient and public involvement activities. We set out to involve young people with cancer to work as co-researchers in the design of the largest ever study of young people with cancer, called BRIGHTLIGHT. In the 10 years since the BRIGHTLIGHT feasibility work began we have involved more than 1200 young people as co-researchers, collaborators, consultants and dissemination partners. We chronicle the key points of this 10-year journey, sharing our success, describing our challenges and the solutions we put in place; sharing also what worked and did not work. Here we share some of these experiences of involving young people in this research and offer some practical advice for those looking to do the same. ABSTRACT: Background Young people with cancer, broadly those aged 13–24 years at diagnosis, warrant special attention; physiological and psychological growth creates complex psychosocial needs which neither adult nor child systems are suitably designed to deal with. Resulting from these needs, they are often described as ‘vulnerable’, ‘hard to reach’ and ‘difficult to engage’, and consequently are often over looked for patient and public involvement/engagement (PPIE) roles. In our study ‘BRIGHTLIGHT’, we set out to evaluate whether specialist care for young people adds value, ensuring young people were central to our PPIE activities. We believe that BRIGHTLIGHT is unique as a very large study of young people with cancer which has successfully overcome the challenges of including young people in the research process so we are confident that they have influenced every aspect of study design, conduct and dissemination. Methods We chronicle a period of 10 years, over which we describe our approach and our methods to involving young people in PPIE activities in BRIGHTLIGHT. We describe the feasibility work, study set up, conduct and dissemination of our findings, and weave through our story of PPIE to illustrate its benefits. Through the narration of our experience we highlight significant points that both influenced and changed our direction of travel. We reflect on our experiences and offer some practical advice for those looking to do the same. Results In the 10 years since the BRIGHTLIGHT feasibility work began we have involved more than 1200 young people. Their contributions have been isolated and mapped over a 10-year period. We begin at an early step of identifying what research questions to prioritize, we then plot PPIE activities for one of these research priorities, place of care, which evolved into BRIGHTLIGHT. We document steps along the way to evidence the impact of this involvement. Conclusions Young people can make a valuable contribution to healthcare research given adequate support from the research team. Although some challenges exist, we propose that the benefits to young people, researchers and the study considerably outweigh these challenges and PPIE with young people should be integrated in all similar research studies. BioMed Central 2018-12-27 /pmc/articles/PMC6307198/ /pubmed/30607259 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s40900-018-0135-x 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 Research Article
Taylor, Rachel M.
Whelan, Jeremy S.
Gibson, Faith
Morgan, Sue
Fern, Lorna A.
Involving young people in BRIGHTLIGHT from study inception to secondary data analysis: insights from 10 years of user involvement
title Involving young people in BRIGHTLIGHT from study inception to secondary data analysis: insights from 10 years of user involvement
title_full Involving young people in BRIGHTLIGHT from study inception to secondary data analysis: insights from 10 years of user involvement
title_fullStr Involving young people in BRIGHTLIGHT from study inception to secondary data analysis: insights from 10 years of user involvement
title_full_unstemmed Involving young people in BRIGHTLIGHT from study inception to secondary data analysis: insights from 10 years of user involvement
title_short Involving young people in BRIGHTLIGHT from study inception to secondary data analysis: insights from 10 years of user involvement
title_sort involving young people in brightlight from study inception to secondary data analysis: insights from 10 years of user involvement
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6307198/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30607259
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s40900-018-0135-x
work_keys_str_mv AT taylorrachelm involvingyoungpeopleinbrightlightfromstudyinceptiontosecondarydataanalysisinsightsfrom10yearsofuserinvolvement
AT whelanjeremys involvingyoungpeopleinbrightlightfromstudyinceptiontosecondarydataanalysisinsightsfrom10yearsofuserinvolvement
AT gibsonfaith involvingyoungpeopleinbrightlightfromstudyinceptiontosecondarydataanalysisinsightsfrom10yearsofuserinvolvement
AT morgansue involvingyoungpeopleinbrightlightfromstudyinceptiontosecondarydataanalysisinsightsfrom10yearsofuserinvolvement
AT fernlornaa involvingyoungpeopleinbrightlightfromstudyinceptiontosecondarydataanalysisinsightsfrom10yearsofuserinvolvement
AT involvingyoungpeopleinbrightlightfromstudyinceptiontosecondarydataanalysisinsightsfrom10yearsofuserinvolvement
AT involvingyoungpeopleinbrightlightfromstudyinceptiontosecondarydataanalysisinsightsfrom10yearsofuserinvolvement
AT involvingyoungpeopleinbrightlightfromstudyinceptiontosecondarydataanalysisinsightsfrom10yearsofuserinvolvement