| Literature DB >> 29062517 |
Anne McKenzie1, Kirsten Alpers1, Jane Heyworth2, Cindy Phuong2, Bec Hanley3.
Abstract
PLAIN ENGLISHEntities:
Keywords: Attitudes; Awareness; Consumer and community involvement; Consumer and community participation; Patient and public involvement; Training
Year: 2016 PMID: 29062517 PMCID: PMC5611564 DOI: 10.1186/s40900-016-0030-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Res Involv Engagem ISSN: 2056-7529
Survey respondents by year of attendance at training workshops for researchers
| Year of workshop | Number of workshops included in survey | Total participants attending workshops | Number contactable | Number of survey respondents | Respondents as percentage of contactable participants |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2009 | 5 | 97 | 79 | 38 | 48.1 % |
| 2010 | 2 | 41 | 39 | 28 | 71.8 % |
| 2011 | 3 | 55 | 50 | 27 | 54.0 % |
| 2012 | 1 | 12 | 12 | 5 | 41.6 % |
| Did not recall | 2 | ||||
| total | 11 | 205 | 180 | 100 | 55.5 % |
Key messages, barriers and benefits of involvement reported by survey respondents
| Open-ended question | Main theme of response | Number of responses |
|---|---|---|
| What were the key messages you took away from the workshop about consumer and community participation? | Value: Perspectives and priorities of consumers and community members provide value | 25 |
| Commitment: Consumers and community members should be involved from the start and at all stages of the research, even if it is challenging | 12 | |
| Variation: Participation may occur at various stages of the research cycle; forms and levels of participation can vary | 12 | |
| Social justice: Involving consumers and community members is the right thing to do | 10 | |
| Quality: Specific benefits to researchers; improvements in the quality of research | 10 | |
| Relevance: Participation is relevant to consumers, community members and researchers | 8 | |
| Barriers: Acknowledgement that barriers exist | 7 | |
| Resources: Resources are available to implement participation | 6 | |
| Not useful | 1 | |
| Have you experienced any barriers to involving consumer and community participation in your research? | No barriers experienced | 24 |
| Resistance: Lack of support for participation from colleagues/organisation | 15 | |
| Recruitment and retention: Identifying and recruiting consumers; maintaining communication and participation | 12 | |
| Time: constraints on researchers’ time | 10 | |
| Resources Financial and other resource constraints | 9 | |
| Personal: self-imposed barriers | 2 | |
| Not applicable | 7 | |
| Yes, but not specified | 5 | |
| What are the main benefits of implementing consumer and community participation in your research area? | Value: Consumer and community perspectives improve research topics and processes | 33 |
| Relevance: collaboration is relevant to consumers and community members | 23 | |
| Translation: impact of results on policy and practice | 17 | |
| Perspective: Understanding consumers better and listening to community ‘voice’ | 12 | |
| Measurable benefits: Improved health outcomes | 6 | |
| No benefit/yet to see benefit | 6 |
Perception of relevance of involvement prior to and after attendance at workshops
| How relevant was consumer and community participation in research to you: | Prior to attending the workshop | Since attending the workshop | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Options | Number of responses | Percentage of respondents | Number of responses | Percentage of respondents |
| Very relevant | 18 | 24.3 % | 42 | 56.8 % |
| Relevant | 37 | 50.0 % | 29 | 39.2 % |
| Limited relevance | 16 | 21.6 % | 3 | 4.0 % |
| Not relevant | 3 | 4.1 % | 0 | |
| total | 74 | 100 % | 74 | 100 % |
Respondent reasons for increased understanding of the value of involvement after attendance at workshops
| Comments on the impact of the workshop on understanding | Number of comments |
|---|---|
| Reinforced/increased understanding and awareness | 30 |
| Provided tools and strategies to implement involvement | 12 |
| Provided evidence and examples from consumers and researchers | 9 |
| Provided opportunities to connect with and learn from other attendees | 5 |
Awareness of workplace support for involvement reported by workshop attendees
| Workplace support | Number of comments |
|---|---|
| General awareness of existing support and procedures | 8 |
| Engagement with existing consumer and community networks | 6 |
| Organisational policy and guidelines in place | 5 |
| Presentations on participation conducted at workplace | 4 |
| Limited/developing | 2 |
Types of involvement implemented, barriers identified and types of awareness-raising reported by respondents since attending workshops
| Number of responses | |
|---|---|
|
| |
| Consultation with reference/advisory group or forum | 13 |
| Engagement with community representative or advocate in planning and research design | 7 |
| Involving consumers and community members in general | 5 |
| Commenced planning/considering future engagement | 4 |
| Sought advice from consumer advocates/other experts | 3 |
| Introduced policies/improved awareness in workplace | 3 |
| Consumer on study team | 1 |
|
| |
| Constraints in workplace | 4 |
| Too early to determine/intend to implement engagement | 4 |
| Time pressures | 3 |
| Challenges in research/other priorities | 2 |
| Lack of funds | 1 |
|
| |
| Initiated support or engagement activities | 13 |
| Had discussions with or informed colleagues | 11 |
| Attended or presented on participation at events | 5 |
| Recommended consumer advocates or experts | 4 |
| Encountered difficulties in increasing awareness | 4 |
| Awareness already existed | 4 |