Research Involvement and Engagement (Jun 2022)

Protocol for a scoping review to map patient engagement in scoping reviews

  • Nebojša Oravec,
  • Caroline Monnin,
  • April Gregora,
  • Brian Bjorklund,
  • Mudra G. Dave,
  • Annette S. H. Schultz,
  • Anna M. Chudyk

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s40900-022-00361-x
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 1
pp. 1 – 8

Abstract

Read online

Plain English summary A “scoping review” is a type of study that collects and summarizes published and unpublished research reports to better understand the amount and types of information available on a particular topic. There is a well-known framework for how to conduct a scoping review, which involves six stages. The sixth stage is optional, and involves consulting with people who have an interest in the research results (i.e., people who the research is “about” or who it will affect the most). Very few scoping reviews actually include this stage, potentially due to a lack of practical guidance on how to perform it. For scoping reviews related to health research, it is important to consult or more widely engage patients and caregivers in the scoping review’s conduct because these individuals have a unique type of knowledge that comes from their experience of a health issue, which can yield valuable insights. Therefore, we have designed a scoping review that will identify the ways in which patients and caregivers have been engaged in scoping reviews of health research in the past. We hope to produce recommendations to make it easier for other researchers to engage patients and caregivers in scoping reviews.

Keywords