| Literature DB >> 30607259 |
Rachel M Taylor1, Jeremy S Whelan1, Faith Gibson2,3, Sue Morgan4, Lorna A Fern1.
Abstract
PLAIN ENGLISHEntities:
Keywords: Adolescents; BRIGHTLIGHT; Cancer; Consumers; Dissemination; Patient and public involvement; Recruitment; Retention; Teenagers; Young adults
Year: 2018 PMID: 30607259 PMCID: PMC6307198 DOI: 10.1186/s40900-018-0135-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Res Involv Engagem ISSN: 2056-7529
Chronology of BRIGHTLIGHT patient involvement
| Year | Activity |
|---|---|
| 2008 | Core Consumer Group (CCG) present at Find Your Sense of Tumour (FYSOT) |
| 2009 | Essence of Care study begins |
| CCG conduct peer-to-peer interviews | |
| CCG conduct data analysis | |
| CCG member assists with facilitating professional workshop | |
| 2010 | CCG conduct second consultation at FYSOT |
| CCG present at Plenary Session National Cancer Research Institute (NCRI) Conference | |
| CCG present at INVOLVE conference | |
| 2011 | CCG present Essence of Care results at FYSOT |
| Workshop to present Essence of Care results back to CCG and study participants | |
| Workshop to create study name: BRIGHTLIGHT | |
| 2012 | BRIGHTLIGHT logo launched |
| Focus groups to develop the BRIGHTLIGHT survey | |
| 2013 | YAP workshop on access to research |
| YAP instigate launch of Twitter | |
| 2014 | YAP member interviewed by BBC5 Live Radio |
| YAP members create video of information sheets | |
| YAP workshop on study retention | |
| BRIGHTLIGHT public and patient involvement and engagement (PPIE) featured in the NCRI newsletter | |
| YAP present at FYSOT | |
| 2015 | BRIGHTLIGHT featured in INVOLVE newsletter |
| YAP workshops - generating hypotheses, and body image and sexuality | |
| YAP launch new website | |
| 2016 | YAP workshop on online information needs |
| YAP member presents at NCRI Conference Schools Session | |
| 2017 | Begin production of dissemination play, |
| Opening night of | |
| YAP co-chair the joint TYAC-BRIGHTLIGHT conference | |
| YAP workshop on sexuality |
CCG Core Consumer Group, FYSOT Find Your Sense of Tumour, NCIN National Cancer Intelligence Network, NCRI National Cancer Research Institute, PPIE public and patient involvement and engagement, RCN Royal College of Nursing, YAP Young Advisory Panel
Unanswered questions supporting TYA cancer care
| 1. What is age appropriate specialist care? |
Fictional newspaper headlines and the resulting theme
| Newspaper headline | Resulting theme |
|---|---|
| Cancer diagnosis made me grow up | Life changing impact of diagnosis |
| I’m more than my cancer | Provision of information |
| If I’d had known… I would have travelled there | Place of care |
| Cancer nurse tells mum to get out) | Role of health professionals |
| It’ll finish one day, treatment’s not forever | Coping |
| Rehab[ilitation] buddies for cancer survivors | Peer support |
| Counselling for patients to cope | Psychological support |
| The tumour’s out but what now | Life after cancer |
Fig. 1The majority of young people feel cancer research should also include families and friends
Fig. 2Young people feel that quality of life is as important as survival
A summary of the BRIGHTLIGHT programme of research
| Aspect of evaluation | Study design |
|---|---|
| Workstream 1: What is specialist care? | |
| Identify the competence of healthcare professionals delivering care to TYA | International e-Delphi study [ |
| Describe the culture of TYA cancer care and define ‘age-appropriate care’ | Multi-case study across 4 networks of care (involving 24 NHS Trusts in England) [ |
| Develop a measure quantifying access to specialist TYA cancer care | Analysis of NHS HES Admitted Patient Care data |
| Workstream 2: Does specialist care make a difference | |
| Determine the outcomes associated with TYA cancer care | Longitudinal cohort study using a bespoke survey [ |
| Determine carers experience of TYA cancer care | Unmet needs questionnaire administered to young people’s main carer nominated at wave 1 |
| Workstream 3: How much does specialist care cost? | |
| Calculate the cost of TYA cancer care | Young person administered health economics questionnaires for out of pocket costs, analysis of clinical and HES data |
HES Hospital Episode Statistics, NHS National Health Service, TYA teenage and young adult
Fig. 3Links between Twister™ moves and aspects of BRIGHTLIGHT data
The top three research questions generated through BRIGHTLIGHT Twister™
| 1. Is the impact of cancer affected by how much support you get from people in similar situations? |
Fig. 4Summary of how young people have informed BRIGHTLIGHT
Guidance for researchers: the Seven Ps of PPIE
| 1. Passionate People | • The right professional team is crucial. If the team do not believe in PPIE then it will be difficult to move beyond tokenism. |
| 2. Preparation | • Take time to think about what you want your group to do. Be clear with them about their tasks and input. |
| 3. Practice | • Events will get easier and better with time: the more you do the more familiar you will become. |
| 4. Pounds | • PPIE can be resource intensive, plan a budget in your grant application. |
| 5. Perseverance | • It may take a while to find the right people to become involved. The group may be in flux establishing its core members and this can take time. |
| 6. Post it notes | • Post it note methodologies are useful, however there are a realm of activities in healthcare and beyond, which lend themselves well to PPIE. |
| 7. Patience | • Effective PPIE groups and events can take time to establish. |