| Literature DB >> 33462773 |
Sophie Staniszewska1, Edward M Hill2, Richard Grant3, Peter Grove4, Jarina Porter3, Tinevimbo Shiri5, Sue Tulip3, Jane Whitehurst3, Claire Wright6, Samik Datta7, Stavros Petrou8,9, Matt Keeling2.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: The Mathematical and Economic Modelling for Vaccination and Immunisation Evaluation (MEMVIE) programme aimed to explore, capture and support the potential contribution of the public to mathematical and economic modelling, in order to identify the values that underpin public involvement (PI) in modelling and co-produce a framework that identifies the nature and type of PI in modelling and supports its implementation.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33462773 PMCID: PMC8205902 DOI: 10.1007/s40271-020-00476-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Patient ISSN: 1178-1653 Impact factor: 3.883
Fig. 1The left-hand side of the framework represents the epidemiological components of modelling, while the middle section represents the health economic components of the modelling. Each phase is labelled Ep (epidemiological) or Ec (economic), corresponding to the associated section of the long-form framework (Appendix 2). The framework should be read across horizontally, i.e. Ep1, then Ec1, Ep2, Ec2, and so on. The legend on the right-hand side denotes the five types of PI contribution identified by the reference group. Patterned backgrounds illustrate the regions of the model pathway where the associated PI contribution type predominately features. PI public involvement, QALYs quality-adjusted life-years, GP General Practitioner
A values framework for PI in modelling
| Values | Why we are involving public in modelling | Further comments |
|---|---|---|
| Nature of knowledge | The public bring different forms of knowledge, expertise and societal perspectives that can complement the modelling team knowledge | The public provide a different perspective, including experiential knowledge based on specific expertise, a patient carer view of the disease and community knowledge, and a wider world view. The public can also interpret and evaluate research evidence in different ways. As such, they offer a unique and important contribution to modelling |
| Collaborating through co-production | The principle of co-production is important in creating a model. It recognises that the public are equal players in the team | Co-production represents a key way in which PI is enacted. NIHR INVOLVE co-production guidance (Hickey et al. [ |
| Relevance | To help ensure the model is more relevant to patients and wider society | Models should be relevant for the population they aim to serve. That being the case, outputs from modelling analysis can provide a worthwhile contribution to the evidence base |
| Credibility through scrutiny | To engage with, hear the public voice and respond to it. This can enhance the extent to which the model is trusted and believed in and improves credibility | The public have better confidence and trust in the development and application of the model, partly because it has been developed with public involvement and scrutiny |
| Consistency through scrutiny | The model needs to be consistent in terms of how decisions about variables, inputs and quality of data are made | Additional scrutiny of variables, data and assumptions leads to increased consistency with regard to the model inputs |
| Validity | It is important to recognise that validity needs to be judged within the constraints of the available data that can be discussed and evaluated. PI can help develop community validity | Community validity can be thought of in the wider societal context, alongside other forms of validity. The model thus represents the closest we can get to reality and it is cogent and sound from a public view. Public involvement makes the flaws and limitations of a model more transparent |
| Utility | The model needs to have practical applicability. PI can help ensure this | The public helps ensure that the operationalisation of the model is based on and creates practical applicability. In other words, it would work in the real world |
| Contextualisation | The model needs to sit within a wider societal context and public involvement allows us to identify these societal factors. They are important because they may contribute to the content validity of the model | The model accounts for wider social factors that may impact on its success by being aware of them. The public present a different view The researchers and modellers can tap into the wider lived experience |
| Connection | The model needs to consider connections to other contexts and services | The model sits within a wider context, linked to societal institutions such as schools, health and social care services and the political context of service provision. The public could have a potential role in vaccine programme implementation |
| Transparency | The model needs to be transparent in meaning, in its development, and in its choice and use of data/inputs | Public involvement can help make the process of model development transparent and aid understanding of the relative strengths and weaknesses of the model. PI also provides stakeholder involvement in something that directly affects them and their children |
| Diversity of input | We can enhance the diversity of public views that shape the model | We recognise that diversity in views is important and active public involvement is a purposeful activity that aims to create diversity in thinking and helps mitigate against conservative or established views and ways of working or ‘groupthink’ |
| Continuous improvement | Each model needs continuous improvement during its development and thereafter | By adopting a model of continuous improvement, it is possible to identify and comment on gaps. PI can provide suggestions for policy makers concerning wider relevance, future information and data requirements and ideas for future development |
| Ethical values | The ethics aspects of a model need to be recognised and understood | We recognise there may be different ethical issues that need to be considered. Certain methods may also create ethical dilemmas. We also need to consider wide ethical issues such as doing no harm |
| Recognising tacit assumptions | Explore the tacit assumptions of the entire team | We recognise that public members involved in a modelling project are likely to support the concept of vaccination as a public good |
PI public involvement, NIHR National Institute for Health Research
Public involvement in research is often underpinned by a set of values, often tacit. It is important to identify the full range of values of relevance at the start of a PIPI activity, in order to identify possible motivation and perception and how these might vary across a team. In this table, we provide a summary of the values that were identified during the MEMVIE study and which underpinned our work
Public contributor and academic contributor views
| (Public contributor) “We had no picture of what PI involvement would look like, and no route map to guide our journey. We also had no idea of the constraints we might need to work within. The researchers we were working with had no idea of what they wanted from us, or even if we could add any anything useful to their model. The first year really felt like working in the dark, not even sure what we were trying to achieve” |
| (Public contributor) “A key breakthrough was the pictorial representation of the Epidemiological and Economic Model shown in Fig |
| (Academic contributor) "When I joined midway through the duration of the MEMVIE project, I had not had any previous exposure to public involvement as part of the research process. I found it extremely beneficial to have an additional forum to describe our modelling process, discuss model assumptions and examine data. From my perspective, being given the opportunity to convey the work to public members through reasoned discourse, ensured justification of modelling aspects, aiding model integrity and validity. In addition, public involvement generated broader discussion surrounding data curation and data collection (such as questionnaire content), producing recommendations that can be used to inform future developments" |
| Public involvement (PI) in modelling is feasible and desirable. |
| The Mathematical and Economic Modelling for Vaccination and Immunisation Evaluation (MEMVIE) Public Involvement Framework can enhance the quality, validity and relevance of models. |
| PI in modelling can contribute to the decisions policy makers have to make. |