| Literature DB >> 28768629 |
S Staniszewska1, J Brett2, I Simera3, K Seers4, C Mockford5, S Goodlad6, D G Altman7, D Moher8, R Barber9, S Denegri10, A Entwistle5, P Littlejohns11, C Morris12, R Suleman5, V Thomas13, C Tysall5.
Abstract
Background While the patient and public involvement (PPI) evidence base has expanded over the past decade, the quality of reporting within papers is often inconsistent, limiting our understanding of how it works, in what context, for whom, and why.Objective To develop international consensus on the key items to report to enhance the quality, transparency, and consistency of the PPI evidence base. To collaboratively involve patients as research partners at all stages in the development of GRIPP2.Methods The EQUATOR method for developing reporting guidelines was used. The original GRIPP (Guidance for Reporting Involvement of Patients and the Public) checklist was revised, based on updated systematic review evidence. A three round Delphi survey was used to develop consensus on items to be included in the guideline. A subsequent face-to-face meeting produced agreement on items not reaching consensus during the Delphi process.Results 143 participants agreed to participate in round one, with an 86% (123/143) response for round two and a 78% (112/143) response for round three. The Delphi survey identified the need for long form (LF) and short form (SF) versions. GRIPP2-LF includes 34 items on aims, definitions, concepts and theory, methods, stages and nature of involvement, context, capture or measurement of impact, outcomes, economic assessment, and reflections and is suitable for studies where the main focus is PPI. GRIPP2-SF includes five items on aims, methods, results, outcomes, and critical perspective and is suitable for studies where PPI is a secondary focus.Conclusions GRIPP2-LF and GRIPP2-SF represent the first international evidence based, consensus informed guidance for reporting patient and public involvement in research. Both versions of GRIPP2 aim to improve the quality, transparency, and consistency of the international PPI evidence base, to ensure PPI practice is based on the best evidence. In order to encourage its wide dissemination this article is freely accessible on The BMJ and Research Involvement and Engagement journal websites. Published by the BMJ Publishing Group Limited. For permission to use (where not already granted under a licence) please go to http://group.bmj.com/group/rights-licensing/permissions.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28768629 PMCID: PMC5539518 DOI: 10.1136/bmj.j3453
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ ISSN: 0959-8138
GRIPP2 long form
| Section and topic | Item | Reported on page No | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Section 1: Abstract of paper | ||||
| 1a: Aim | Report the aim of the study | |||
| 1b: Methods | Describe the methods used by which patients and the public were involved | |||
| 1c: Results | Report the impacts and outcomes of PPI in the study | |||
| 1d:Conclusions | Summarise the main conclusions of the study | |||
| 1e: Keywords | Include PPI, “patient and public involvement,” or alternative terms as keywords | |||
| Section 2: Background to paper | ||||
| 2a: Definition | Report the definition of PPI used in the study and how it links to comparable studies | |||
| 2b: Theoretical underpinnings | Report the theoretical rationale and any theoretical influences relating to PPI in the study | |||
| 2c: Concepts and theory development | Report any conceptual models or influences used in the study | |||
| Section 3: Aims of paper | ||||
| 3: Aim | Report the aim of the study | |||
| Section 4: Methods of paper | ||||
| 4a: Design | Provide a clear description of methods by which patients and the public were involved | |||
| 4b: People involved | Provide a description of patients, carers, and the public involved with the PPI activity in the study | |||
| 4c: Stages of involvement | Report on how PPI is used at different stages of the study | |||
| 4d: Level or nature of involvement | Report the level or nature of PPI used at various stages of the study | |||
| Section 5: Capture or measurement of PPI impact | ||||
| 5a: Qualitative evidence of impact | If applicable, report the methods used to qualitatively explore the impact of PPI in the study | |||
| 5b: Quantitative evidence of impact | If applicable, report the methods used to quantitatively measure or assess the impact of PPI | |||
| 5c: Robustness of measure | If applicable, report the rigour of the method used to capture or measure the impact of PPI | |||
| Section 6: Economic assessment | ||||
| 6: Economic assessment | If applicable, report the method used for an economic assessment of PPI | |||
| Section 7: Study results | ||||
| 7a: Outcomes of PPI | Report the results of PPI in the study, including both positive and negative outcomes | |||
| 7b: Impacts of PPI | Report the positive and negative impacts that PPI has had on the research, the individuals involved (including patients and researchers), and wider impacts | |||
| 7c: Context of PPI | Report the influence of any contextual factors that enabled or hindered the process or impact of PPI | |||
| 7d: Process of PPI | Report the influence of any process factors, that enabled or hindered the impact of PPI | |||
| 7ei: Theory development | Report any conceptual or theoretical development in PPI that have emerged | |||
| 7eii: Theory development | Report evaluation of theoretical models, if any | |||
| 7f: Measurement | If applicable, report all aspects of instrument development and testing (eg, validity, reliability, feasibility, acceptability, responsiveness, interpretability, appropriateness, precision) | |||
| 7g: Economic assessment | Report any information on the costs or benefit of PPI | |||
| Section 8: Discussion and conclusions | ||||
| 8a: Outcomes | Comment on how PPI influenced the study overall. Describe positive and negative effects | |||
| 8b: Impacts | Comment on the different impacts of PPI identified in this study and how they contribute to new knowledge | |||
| 8c: Definition | Comment on the definition of PPI used (reported in the Background section) and whether or not you would suggest any changes | |||
| 8d: Theoretical underpinnings | Comment on any way your study adds to the theoretical development of PPI | |||
| 8e: Context | Comment on how context factors influenced PPI in the study | |||
| 8f: Process | Comment on how process factors influenced PPI in the study | |||
| 8g: Measurement and capture of PPI impact | If applicable, comment on how well PPI impact was evaluated or measured in the study | |||
| 8h: Economic assessment | If applicable, discuss any aspects of the economic cost or benefit of PPI, particularly any suggestions for future economic modelling. | |||
| 8i: Reflections/critical perspective | Comment critically on the study, reflecting on the things that went well and those that did not, so that others can learn from this study | |||
PPI=patient and public involvement
GRIPP2 short form
| Section and topic | Item | Reported on page No |
|---|---|---|
| 1: Aim | Report the aim of PPI in the study | |
| 2: Methods | Provide a clear description of the methods used for PPI in the study | |
| 3: Study results | Outcomes—Report the results of PPI in the study, including both positive and negative outcomes | |
| 4: Discussion and conclusions | Outcomes—Comment on the extent to which PPI influenced the study overall. Describe positive and negative effects | |
| 5: Reflections/critical perspective | Comment critically on the study, reflecting on the things that went well and those that did not, so others can learn from this experience |
PPI=patient and public involvement
PPI in the development of GRIPP2 using GRIPP 2-SF*
| Section and topic | Item |
|---|---|
|
| To develop international consensus on the key items to report to enhance the quality, transparency, and consistency of the PPI evidence base. To collaboratively involve patients as research partners at all stages in the development of GRIPP2 |
|
| Three patient partners were recruited to the research team to assist at all stages of the development of and consensus process for the GRIPP2 guidelines. They were involved in refining the focus of the research questions, in developing the search strategy, in interpreting results, in discussions identifying the need for development of guidelines, and in selecting the items for the original GRIPP checklist. The patient partners helped recruit participants (n=60/143) to the Delphi survey through snowballing techniques. They helped pilot the electronic survey for the first phase of the Delphi survey consensus process and helped other patient reps with technical aspects of completing the online survey, hence improving the response rate in each round of the Delphi. They also worked with the researchers to collate comments from each Delphi survey round, to adapt items, and to feed back to the participants for the next Delphi survey round. They checked comprehension of changed items and comments from the lay perspective. The patient partners took part in the consensus workshop, alongside five other patients (n=8/25 in total) to agree consensus on items not reaching consensus and to adapt wording where items were not clear. The patient partners contributed to edits of the paper and are coauthors. |
|
| PPI contributed to the study in several ways, including: |
|
| Patient and public involvement in this study was very effective and influenced important aspects of the study, based on the impacts in section 3. This might have been related to several factors. Firstly the patient partners had received training around research methods in previous studies, and were actively involved in a patient and public involvement group attached to the University of Warwick. In addition, the researchers were experienced at involving patient partners in their research. |
|
| The PPI in the study was embedded as far as possible into the methods for developing consensus. While not a formal part of EQUATOR methodology, the aim of active collaboration in an attempt to co-produce knowledge worked well. The key challenge was the timescales required to ensure the Delphi survey was completed with appropriate intervals. If this was repeated, these time scales would require extension. We are aware that this process might have limited the extent to which patient partners were able to identify concepts of importance that sit outside of the traditional research paradigm and so may require further development in the future. |
*An example of using the long form can be obtained from the authors