Orphanet Journal of Rare Diseases (Jan 2019)

Patient involvement in medical research: what patients and physicians learn from each other

  • Kalen Young,
  • Dana Kaminstein,
  • Ana Olivos,
  • Cristina Burroughs,
  • Celeste Castillo-Lee,
  • Joyce Kullman,
  • Carol McAlear,
  • Dianne G. Shaw,
  • Antoine Sreih,
  • George Casey,
  • Vasculitis Patient-Powered Research Network,
  • Peter A. Merkel

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13023-018-0969-1
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 7

Abstract

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Abstract Background There is increasing interest in actively involving patients in the process of medical research to help ensure research is relevant and important to both researchers and people affected by the disease under study. This project examined the recently formed Vasculitis Patient-Powered Research Network (VPPRN), a rare disease research network, to better understand what investigators and patients learned from working on research teams together. Methods Qualitative interviews were conducted by phone with patients, physician/PhD-investigators, and study managers/staff who participated in the network. The question guiding the interviews and observational analysis was: “What have investigators and patients learned about working together while working on VPPRN teams?” Interview transcripts were analyzed in combination with observations from multiple in-person and telephone meetings. Results Transcripts and notes were reviewed and coded from 22 interviews conducted among 13 patient-partners, 5 study managers/staff, and 4 MD or PhD-investigators, and 6 in-person and 42 telephone/web-conference meetings. Patient-partners and investigators characterized their working relationships with one another, what they learned from their collaborations, and provided recommendations for future teams of patient-partners and investigators. Major themes included the great benefits of communicating about activities, being open to listening to each group member, and the importance of setting reasonable expectations. Conclusions Direct engagement in research design and development by patient-partners and co-learning between investigators and patient-partners can result in a positive and productive working relationship for all members of a medical research team. This bi-directional engagement directly benefits and impacts research design, participant recruitment to studies, and study subject retention.

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