| Literature DB >> 29062540 |
Lidewij Eva Vat1, Devonne Ryan2, Holly Etchegary3.
Abstract
PLAIN ENGLISHEntities:
Keywords: Health research; Patient and public involvement; Patient engagement; Recruitment; Stakeholder engagement
Year: 2017 PMID: 29062540 PMCID: PMC5611573 DOI: 10.1186/s40900-017-0067-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Res Involv Engagem ISSN: 2056-7529
Role and region of respondents
| Role | Number | Country |
|---|---|---|
| Patient engagement lead SUPPORT Unit | 6 | Canada |
| Public involvement advisor/manager | 2 | United Kingdom |
| Clinical investigator | 3 | Canada and United Kingdom |
| Non-clinical investigator | 2 | Canada and United Kingdom |
| Patient partner in health research | 1 | Canada |
Fig. 1Conceptual framework for recruiting patient partners. (figure modified from the Child Welfare Information Gateway)
Summary of main factors influencing recruitment
| Main factors | Factor description and representative quotes |
|---|---|
| Environment | The need for an environment in which the public has an awareness about engagement opportunities and the (potential) impact of patient engagement was emphasized. Furthermore, relationships, networks and infrastructure facilities such as directories could increase the success of recruitment. The recruiters’ characteristics and their public image were also noted as influential factors. Interviewees widely emphasized that the recruitment strategy should fit with the patient characteristics the team is hoping to recruit. |
| Patient characteristics | It was reported that patients who have time and an interest in the research topic were more likely to become engaged. It was also emphasised that patients bring skills, perspectives and experiences. Drop-out reasons were reported such as health issues or caregiving responsibilities, different priorities, frustration with the pace of the project and an overload of work or volunteer activities. |
| The opportunity | It was widely reported that a clear description of the role, responsibilities, commitment and (potential) impact was helpful to recruit and select patients. For example, one respondent commented, |
| Climate | Recognition and compensation were emphasised as key factors for retention. Interviewees covered expenses such parking fees and travel costs. Multiple interviewees offered financial compensation such as an honorarium, hourly rate, per diem compensation or gift cards. Compensation varies among projects, provinces within Canada and in other countries. |
| Education and support | Education opportunities, ongoing mentorship and support were reported as influential factors for retention. A number of emotional and practical considerations have to be taken into account while working with patient partners such as supportable furniture, timely breaks, transport facilitation and accessible accommodation. For example, one respondent mentioned: |