| Literature DB >> 35596108 |
Morenike Oluwatoyin Folayan1, Magda Conway2, Carolyn Russo3, Nilza Diniz4, Lungile P Jafta2, Nadia A Sam-Agudu5,6,7, Sarah Bernays8,9, Victor M Santana10, Carla Epps11, Mark A Turner12,13.
Abstract
The concept of health equity-the attainment of the highest possible level of health for all members of society-requires equitable access to all aspects of healthcare, including pediatric drug development. However, many communities are under-represented in pediatric drug development programs. Barriers to participation include geographic, economic, racial/ethnic bias, legal, cultural, linguistic, and other factors. While there is no "one size fits all" approach to addressing these barriers, community engagement and collaboration is recognized by the Centers for Disease Control, the World Health Organization, and other global health organizations as a cornerstone for building a more equitable healthcare system. In this article, we will present case studies of stakeholder and community engagement in clinical research for rare diseases and other areas of healthcare, as examples of strategies and practices for actively involving under-represented communities and fostering their participation in pediatric drug development programs. These studies may serve as templates for facilitating equity in pediatric drug development from aspiration into operation.Entities:
Keywords: Access; Adolescent; Child; Drug development; Engagement; Health equity; Stakeholders
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35596108 PMCID: PMC9122543 DOI: 10.1007/s43441-022-00410-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ther Innov Regul Sci ISSN: 2168-4790 Impact factor: 1.337
Fig. 1Youth Trial Boards and culture change during pediatric drug development
Developing successful community engagement programs: lessons learned
| Lesson learned | Case study | Examples |
|---|---|---|
| Address a clear need shared by multiple stakeholders | Saint Jude Affiliate Program, USA | Need to improve outcomes of cancer treatment irrespective of location |
| Legally-authorized representatives, West Africa | Need to recognize and identify legally-authorized representatives of minors for research conducted during humanitarian emergencies | |
| Youth Trial Boards (United Kingdom, South Africa, Uganda, Zimbabwe) | Need to engage young people in the design and implementation of clinical research about them | |
| Develop a clear, relevant vision and mission | All cases | Cross-cutting all cases |
| Understand the role of culture in organizational change | Saint Jude Affiliate Program, USA | Choose an affiliate partner that is committed to their community and consistently energetic about engagement |
| Youth Trial Boards (United Kingdom, South Africa, Uganda, Zimbabwe) | Selecting core staff with a passion for working with youth embedded the project with the ethos of youth engagement | |
| Changing institutional culture is a long process full of mediation, compromise, and sometimes standing your ground | ||
| It is important to manage young people’s expectations about how rapidly culture shifts | ||
| Community engagement requires an investment mentality | Saint Jude Affiliate Program, USA | Establishing sites was a 18- to 24-month process |
| Youth Trial Boards (United Kingdom, South Africa, Uganda, Zimbabwe) | The YTB is an iterative model that is still being shaped | |
| Develop and apply a structured approach | Saint Jude Affiliate Program, USA | Formative assessments are coupled with ongoing site reviews |
| Legally-authorized representatives, West Africa | The LAR document was developed using a Delphi consultation process | |
| Youth Trial Boards (United Kingdom, South Africa, Uganda, Zimbabwe) | A literature review and formative research with young people informed development of the preliminary model | |
| Deploy strong operational and project management | All cases | Cross-cutting all cases |
| Identify and deploy appropriate resources | All cases | Staff/Administration Champions/owners within sponsoring organization Appropriate timelines |
| Saint Jude Affiliate Program, USA | Educational opportunities are available for community partners | |
| Youth Trial Boards (United Kingdom, South Africa, Uganda, Zimbabwe) | Each project site has a multidisciplinary core team with staff who have prior experience working with youth | |
| Members of the core team are trained to engage with clinical trials | ||
| Leverage community resources | Saint Jude Affiliate Program, USA | Community resources include patient navigators, a family advisory committee, and digital health tools |
| Youth Trial Boards (United Kingdom, South Africa, Uganda, Zimbabwe) | Program resources include a referral system for other services to address overall well-being | |
| Communication must be authentic, transparent, and ongoing | Saint Jude Affiliate Program, USA | Information is exchanged on a variety of schedules using a variety of methods about levels of engagement, processes, and outcomes |
| Legally-authorized representatives, West Africa | The project will solicit public comment via an online survey that will be open to the global public for 6 weeks | |
| Youth Trial Boards (United Kingdom, South Africa, Uganda, Zimbabwe) | YTB team members provided feedback on patient information sheets which resulted in development of youth-led information materials | |
| Community engagement is built upon trust | Saint Jude Affiliate Program, USA | Relationships were built through mutual professional interests leveraging existing systems at the time |
| L Legally-authorized representatives, West Africa | Recruitment of project participants was achieved through existing networks (bioethicists, pediatric health researchers, and pediatric health policy makers) | |
| Youth Trial Boards (United Kingdom, South Africa, Uganda, Zimbabwe) | Trust and respect must be established before young people can truly influence and effect change | |
| Success builds on success | Saint Jude Affiliate Program, USA | Be guided by well-defined success that is communicated effectively |
| Manage a portfolio that provides payback to all stakeholders | ||
| Build the case for novel approaches | Youth Trial Boards (United Kingdom, South Africa, Uganda, Zimbabwe) | It took time to secure the industry funding for the project |
| Plan sustainability | Saint Jude Affiliate Program, USA | Identify outcomes that are most important to stakeholders |
| Maintain buy-in through self-directed improvement and ownership of projects by stakeholders | ||
| Legally-authorized representatives, West Africa | Develop a targeted intervention with an exit strategy | |
| Youth Trial Boards (United Kingdom, South Africa, Uganda, Zimbabwe) | The project is developing quality standards on youth engagement that will allow assessment of the impact of YTBs | |
| Develop global strategies that work locally | Legally-authorized representatives, West Africa | The project is developing a regional (West Africa) LAR document that allows country-level adaptation |
| Youth Trial Boards (United Kingdom, South Africa, Uganda, Zimbabwe) | This was a multi-national project that required developing practice agreements with partners that complied with country-specific regulations and laws |