Understanding the role of patient and public involvement in renal dietetic research

The objective was to consult patients on a proposed recruitment strategy to a patient and public involvement exercise. We wanted to explore the reasoning and willingness of patients to become co-researchers within a grant application.<strong> </strong>Eighteen people using the renal heal...

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Autores principales: Andrew Morris, Deborah Biggerstaff, Nithya Krishnan, Deborah Lycett
Formato: article
Lenguaje:EN
Publicado: The Beryl Institute 2017
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Acceso en línea:https://doaj.org/article/1a1736a290d34b4cb13a6f60610d300e
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spelling oai:doaj.org-article:1a1736a290d34b4cb13a6f60610d300e2021-11-15T04:22:04ZUnderstanding the role of patient and public involvement in renal dietetic research2372-0247https://doaj.org/article/1a1736a290d34b4cb13a6f60610d300e2017-07-01T00:00:00Zhttps://pxjournal.org/journal/vol4/iss2/5https://doaj.org/toc/2372-0247The objective was to consult patients on a proposed recruitment strategy to a patient and public involvement exercise. We wanted to explore the reasoning and willingness of patients to become co-researchers within a grant application.<strong> </strong>Eighteen people using the renal health service informed the consultation by action research so that their experiences could be used to guide the overall methodology. Twelve people took part in semi-structured interviews. NVIVO 10 and Framework Analysis were used to interpret emerging themes from the data. The recruitment strategy, informed by research expertise, became an experience-based expert design. The design took into account the limitations of attendance, the informational and physical needs of these service users. Service users wanted to share their experiences with people who would listen and were in a position to help make the changes. This gave them a sense of purpose and autonomy in their treatment and helped them cope with living with renal disease in society. However, feelings of doubt as to whether they could personally ‘make a difference’ as a co-researcher, were common. Consulting service users enabled the research team to recruit more people to interviews to explore motivation considering the unique personal and social needs of this service user group. Service users may need additional and continued support if they are to successfully take part in a clinical study research advisory group.Andrew MorrisDeborah BiggerstaffNithya KrishnanDeborah LycettThe Beryl Institutearticlepatient involvementpublic consultationpatient co-researchersrenaldieteticsservice usersqualitative healthaction researchMedicine (General)R5-920Public aspects of medicineRA1-1270ENPatient Experience Journal (2017)
institution DOAJ
collection DOAJ
language EN
topic patient involvement
public consultation
patient co-researchers
renal
dietetics
service users
qualitative health
action research
Medicine (General)
R5-920
Public aspects of medicine
RA1-1270
spellingShingle patient involvement
public consultation
patient co-researchers
renal
dietetics
service users
qualitative health
action research
Medicine (General)
R5-920
Public aspects of medicine
RA1-1270
Andrew Morris
Deborah Biggerstaff
Nithya Krishnan
Deborah Lycett
Understanding the role of patient and public involvement in renal dietetic research
description The objective was to consult patients on a proposed recruitment strategy to a patient and public involvement exercise. We wanted to explore the reasoning and willingness of patients to become co-researchers within a grant application.<strong> </strong>Eighteen people using the renal health service informed the consultation by action research so that their experiences could be used to guide the overall methodology. Twelve people took part in semi-structured interviews. NVIVO 10 and Framework Analysis were used to interpret emerging themes from the data. The recruitment strategy, informed by research expertise, became an experience-based expert design. The design took into account the limitations of attendance, the informational and physical needs of these service users. Service users wanted to share their experiences with people who would listen and were in a position to help make the changes. This gave them a sense of purpose and autonomy in their treatment and helped them cope with living with renal disease in society. However, feelings of doubt as to whether they could personally ‘make a difference’ as a co-researcher, were common. Consulting service users enabled the research team to recruit more people to interviews to explore motivation considering the unique personal and social needs of this service user group. Service users may need additional and continued support if they are to successfully take part in a clinical study research advisory group.
format article
author Andrew Morris
Deborah Biggerstaff
Nithya Krishnan
Deborah Lycett
author_facet Andrew Morris
Deborah Biggerstaff
Nithya Krishnan
Deborah Lycett
author_sort Andrew Morris
title Understanding the role of patient and public involvement in renal dietetic research
title_short Understanding the role of patient and public involvement in renal dietetic research
title_full Understanding the role of patient and public involvement in renal dietetic research
title_fullStr Understanding the role of patient and public involvement in renal dietetic research
title_full_unstemmed Understanding the role of patient and public involvement in renal dietetic research
title_sort understanding the role of patient and public involvement in renal dietetic research
publisher The Beryl Institute
publishDate 2017
url https://doaj.org/article/1a1736a290d34b4cb13a6f60610d300e
work_keys_str_mv AT andrewmorris understandingtheroleofpatientandpublicinvolvementinrenaldieteticresearch
AT deborahbiggerstaff understandingtheroleofpatientandpublicinvolvementinrenaldieteticresearch
AT nithyakrishnan understandingtheroleofpatientandpublicinvolvementinrenaldieteticresearch
AT deborahlycett understandingtheroleofpatientandpublicinvolvementinrenaldieteticresearch
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