Monday 25 February 2019

Patients as Partners in Health Research

When I was diagnosed with Rheumatoid Arthritis (RA) it was pre-internet, near the time the VIC 20 came out. (it had 20K capacity but only 5K was usable memory)


VIC 20

I managed to live with the RA and work up to retirement when I suddenly had 50 hours a week to do whatever I wanted. Learning a new language and catching up with my book collection had less appeal than I expected so I adapted the idea and decided to learn to speak "medical".  When the chance to change gears finally came, patient engagement and working for change in health care looked more interesting and rewarding.  


eROAR 2014

During the first research project I was part of (eROAR 2014) I didn't realize that our team was doing formal qualitative research. I thought I was just helping out and ended up as a co-author on this paper - Evolving Patient-Researcher Collaboration: Case Study of a Patient-Led Knowledge Translation Event

Another early collaboration was a SPOR funded demonstration project, where our team developed tools for partnering in health research for both patients and researchers based on our experiences as members of health research teams. The tools help each group learn to work with the other. We also included a set of additional tools for evaluation. 

So, if you are a patient thinking about getting involved in research you might have a few questions


  • Why would researchers want to or feel compelled to engage with patients? 
  • Are there benefits on both sides?
  • How do interested patients and researchers find one another? 
and then think about why the status quo has changed from what was normal practice in the past ie no patients.

One of the reasons for change would be the policies of the organizations that fund research. Here are quotes from three of them.

CIHR (Canadian Institutes for Health Research) “At CIHR, we want to help transform the role of patient … to a proactive partner who helps shape health research and, as a result, health care”

The SPOR (Strategy for Patient Oriented Research) program at CIHR - " Patients need to be involved in all aspects of research to ensure questions and results are relevant"

IMHA (Institute of Musculoskeletal Health and Arthritis)
encourages its stakeholders to engage in Knowledge Translation and Patient Engagement which occurs when patients play an active role in defining issues, considering solutions, and identifying resources or priorities for action which can take place at a variety of stages in the research, planning or implementation phases of a project. 


There are many ways to include patients on research teams, starting with the application where the most obvious is the Patient Engagement section. There are  numerous areas for patient influence such as the
Summary where patients can add relevance from the public point of view
Knowledge Transfer Plan -- Include marketing for reach and impact
Team roles – define roles of citizen partners or panel, if chosen
Patient engagement – add an excerpt of the partnership strategy
Timelines – it takes time for researchers to develop an engagement plan and recruit patient partners
Budget – include costs of recruitment, participation and support.
The ideal is to have patients involved through the whole process, from choosing the question to the Terms of Reference, and the protocols, as well as data gathering and analysis.

Of course patients and caregivers are not researchers. In many cases it is our lived experience that gives us expertise and insights that can be useful. 

There are some courses offered to help patients develop a better understanding of research and for researchers to learn about partnering and team building. Here are some that I know of.



Course
Name/Funder
Participants
Master Class
McMaster/SPOR
Patients, Researchers, Decision makers, Clinicians

Partners in Research
St Mike’s/Li Ka Shing & SPOR
Patients and Researchers


CIHR Core Curriculum
CIHR
Patients and Researchers


PaCER- Patient and Community Engagement Research
Alberta Health Services, Cummings School of Medicine
Patients

Western University University of
Waterloo
PORTL-PHC (Patient-Oriented Research Training & Learning- Primary Health Care)

4 modules 
Available online**
Some of us have taken the TCPS-2 Ethics course or other courses like those above. Of course if we need to do a CIHR CCV that may take support. That is a specialized CV meant mainly for researchers which is sometimes required for patients. I found there were many areas that did not apply to me as a patient.

Patients and family members should be full partners and collaborators because they are key stakeholders through paying for the health system, and have a personal and societal interest in improving outcomes. They may also have life experiences or background that can be useful. One night at dinner with other patient researchers we had a speech language pathologist, a molecular biologist, an IBM Watson team member, and a recruiting expert around the table.


 Slide from Patient Advisors Network (PAN)


Of course partnering is the essence of engagement. I have sometimes seen that the distinction between patients and subjects can be unclear. Generally I would say that if you wanted me to sign a consent form before I participated I would not consider myself to be a partner, I'd be a subject.

The strong support for patient inclusion at the funder level and access to information has made a big difference to the numbers of interested patients and caregivers over the past five years. There are many enthusiastic patients.who are willing to be involved.   


As an example, for the Health Minister's Patient and Family Advisory Committee (PFAC) in Ontario there were 1200 applications.
The CHI Partners conference received 170 applications for about 12 spaces.
The Partners in Research course fills up very fast and has wait lists.

So, how do researchers find patients and caregivers who want to be research partners? 


One idea is through a community of practice for patients called The Patient Advisors Network which is a national Canadian group. Members can share opportunities to get involved on the groupsite, after they join.

There is also a provincial Support Unit of SPOR in every province which may give you tips for involvement, and in BC there is a group of 700 patients and caregivers called Patient Voices Network.

    
You might also find potential collaborators on Twitter, where the clinician, researcher and patient community is quite robust.

And even in lab science where the research might be concentrating on platelets, mouse knees, or HLA antigens there is a place for patients. Having patients involved is an effective way to ensure clear language is used in writing and promoting real evidence-based messages to a non-scientific audience, or to increase the impact of the research results to the people who will ultimately benefit.

Researchers at ARC (Arthritis Research Canada) collaborated with a patient group, CAPA (the Canadian Arthritis Patient Alliance) to produce the recent #ArthritisParent tweetchat, that showcased recent research on biosimilars and pregnancy.


ARC is also the group that produces ROAR which is a collaboration of patients and researchers presenting arthritis research.

#eROAR is an annual event done live and by webinar and tweetchat to showcase research done by ARC. You can find the 2018 videos here.

Here's one of my favourite efforts to make science understandable for everyone. 


This international contest has challenged scientists at every level – from graduate students to senior researchers – to communicate familiar yet complex concepts in ways that are understandable to an 11-year-old.

Alan Alda founded the Flame Challenge organization and the prizewinners are fascinating.


** Are you interested in taking the program?
Contact Program Coordinator: Rob Van Hoorn
rvanhoo@uwo.ca to sign up.












2 comments:

  1. What a great set of curriculum. It would be a terrific way to help some folks with their responsibilities. Both researchers and patients would greatly benefit.

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    Replies
    1. Thanks Rick, the courses have been great. They take different amounts of work on the part of the participants but it's great to learn, and find out more about what works and what doesn't work. It's also really valuable to connect, whether in person or virtually.
      I went from taking the Partners in Research course the first time to being a co-presenter as it continued.Nice to 'see' you.

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