| Literature DB >> 35349029 |
Shannon M Nugent1,2, Erika Cottrell3,4, Sara J Knight5,6, Mark Helfand3,4.
Abstract
Engaging patients in the research process helps to ensure researchers ask meaningful questions and generate useful evidence to inform healthcare decisions. In 2015, the Veterans Health Administration (VA) Health Services Research & Development (HSR&D) service convened a Veteran engagement workgroup, comprised of researchers, clinicians, and Veterans, to identify ways to integrate Veteran engagement into HSR&D. A subgroup was designated to explore the utility of health experiences research (research focused on enhancing understanding of people's experiences with healthcare and illnesses) as a mechanism to complement and broaden traditional engagement mechanisms. The subgroup recommended the VA adopt the Database of Individual Patient Experiences (DIPEx) methodology for conducting and disseminating health experiences research (HER). In this paper, we describe (1) the key components of the DIPEx approach, (2) how these components complement and broaden current methods of Veteran engagement, (3) an update on VA activities using the DIPEx approach, and (4) a roadmap for future VA HER activities.Entities:
Keywords: Veteran engagement; health experiences research; qualitative research
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35349029 PMCID: PMC8993951 DOI: 10.1007/s11606-021-07306-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Gen Intern Med ISSN: 0884-8734 Impact factor: 6.473
Example of Topics and Subtopics Included in the Gulf War Illness Module
| Topics | Subtopics |
|---|---|
| Military context | Pre-deployment (e.g., training, lack of preparation, abrupt deployment) In-theater/combat experiences Transitioning home (health screen, challenges re-assimilating into civilian life, Rest of military career (non-Gulf War deployments) |
| When something first went wrong | Description of when Veteran first noticed something wrong with his/her health |
| Illness and symptom experiences | GWI or other medical or mental health conditions Symptom descriptions |
| Diagnostic Journey | Diagnostic process |
| Living with Gulf War Illness | Illness impact on life Comorbidities (physical and mental health) |
| Coping and support (non-medical) | Coping mechanisms Other Veteran services used Advocacy, seeking information, and engagement in research |
| Experiences seeking healthcare | Navigating healthcare systems (VA, private, military) VA care Barriers to care |
| Experiences with treatment | Types of treatments used (pharmacological and non-pharm, treatment adverse events) Description of treatment utility |
| Parallel life experiences | Relationship, hobbies, children/family, work/education |
| Insights and reflections | Lessons learned Needs and challenges of Gulf War Era Veterans Messages for others (VA, military, clinicians, family) |
| Recommendations for VA | Future research needs Clinical care and system level needs and recommendations |
Quotes from Modules Exemplifying Participant Perspectives on Value of Modules
| Module | Quote |
|---|---|
| Gulf War Veteran #1 | |
| Gulf War Veteran #2 | |
| Caregiver of Gulf War Veteran | |
| Veteran with TBI #1 | |
| Veteran with TBI #2 |