This presentation was delivered as part of a seminar to the Child Health Evaluative Sciences (CHES) Research Group, based at The Hospital for Sick Children (SickKids) in Toronto, ON, Canada. The presentation focused on the importance and some of the practicalities of involving young people in research.
2. Hello!
I AM SIMON STONES
Award-winning patient leader.
Patient and carer advocate.
Expert by experience.
Freelance consultant.
Charity representative.
Qualitative researcher.
You can find me at:
@SimonRStones
3. TELL ME AND I forget
TEACH ME AND I remember
INVOLVE ME AND I learn
7. When patients, carers and members of the public
are active partners in research, rather than the
‘subjects’ or participants of research.
It is about doing research with or by patients,
carers and the public, not doing research to
patients, carers and the public.
8. THINKING research AT EVERY OPPORTUNITY
• Where people are actively involved in
research projects and in research
organisations.Involvement
• Where information and
knowledge about research
is provided and
disseminated to people,
for example, a science fair
or hospital open day.
Engagement
• When people
take part in a
research study
(formally
referred to as
‘subjects’).
Participation
9. THINKING research AT EVERY OPPORTUNITY
Developing ideas
and prioritising
research
questions
Designing
research,
applying for
funding and
ethics
Conducting,
analysing and
disseminating
research
Providing and receiving training and development
opportunities – young people and their families are
an important part of your team
10. REMEMBER TO individualize OPPORTUNITIES
Diagnosis
Denial
Anger and
frustration
Adapting
Acceptance
Living
life to
the full
11. RESEARCH empowers ME, AND OTHERS, TO TAKE CONTROL
To learn about our conditions
To differentiate between
evidence-informed and anecdotal guidance
To develop skills and techniques
To find support from peers
To grow in confidence
12. IT’S MORE THAN JUST A nice THING TO DO
The quality and relevance of research can be
improved
Information can be made more appropriate and
accessible
Methods can be tailored so that they are acceptable
and sensitive to participants’ needs
Participation can be increased
Identification of relevant research questions
Young people and families can be empowered
13. DRAFT STANDARDS FOR PATIENT AND PUBLIC INVOLVEMENT
1. Inclusive opportunities - We provide clear, meaningful and
accessible opportunities for involvement, for a wide range of
people across all research.
2. Working together – We create and sustain respectful
relationships, policies, practices and environments for effective
working in research.
3. Support and learning - We ensure public involvement is
undertaken with confidence and competence by everyone.
4. Communications - We provide clear and regular
communications as part of all involvement plans and activities
5. Impact - We report and act on the impact of involving the public
in research.
6. Governance - We ensure the community of interest voices are
heard, valued, and included in decision making.
www.invo.org.uk
14. Young people
living with
health
conditions and
their families
Patient
organisations
and charities
Health and
education
professionals,
researchers,
industry and
government
CLOSER COLLABOARATION BETWEEN ALL stakeholders IS NECESSARY
Ensuring
scientific and
technical
excellence
Ensuring relevance Accountability
Understanding of the real issues facing patients and carers
16. APPROACHES SHOULD BE bespoke
Existing groups
There are lots of existing young
person advisory groups which
you can contact to support
your work.
Social media
Social media is an invaluable
tool for connecting with young
people and their families.
Advisory groups
Establishing new advisory
groups for specific projects or
initiatives is a good idea if you
want to establish a group you
can contact more frequently.
Ad-hoc focus
groups
Ad-hoc focus groups work well
for prioritizing and designing
research for grant applications,
especially when budgets are
limited.
Consultancy
Meet with patient opinion
leaders and charitable
organisations to help them
advise and shape your work.
Co-researcher
partnerships
The gold standard is when
young people and their families
become co-researchers: true
research partners with you.
18. www.icanresearch.org
iCAN advocates for children in healthcare globally,
especially those involved in healthcare research
Advocacy
iCAN aims to to provide a platform for children
and their families to have a voice in research
An expanding network of 19 chapters across the
globe, which continues to grow!
Global
impact
Research
19. http://bcchr.ca/kidscan/home
The KidsCan Young Persons Advisory Group helps
young people learn about research work directly from
research teams. They are able to share their views
with the researchers, supported by their personal
experience and knowledge. The advice directly
influences all phases of inquiry including the
development of research questions, methods,
recruitment plans, and strategies for results
dissemination.
Vancouver, BC
22. www.raiise.co.uk
There are more than 1
million children in the
UK who have a long-
term, or even lifelong
illness, and need
medicines for the
foreseeable future.
23. HOW SOME ORGANISATIONS embed YOUNG PEOPLE IN THE GRANT PROCESS
Triage/outline
review
Peer review
Applicant rebuttal
Application deadline Funding announcement
Panel review
Research and patient insight at every step in the process…
24. THE TRECA project
The NIHR-funded TRECA study has
developed multimedia information
(MMI) resources with text,
animations, videos and diagrams to
inform children, young people and
parents about research.
Place your screenshot here
25. THE SIRJIA project
Young people and families were
involved in identifying the primary
outcome measure for the study, as well
as the inclusion/exclusion criteria, and
methods of data collection.
OPPORTUNITY FOR
YOUNG PEOPLE WITH JIA!
26. IF YOU DON’T LIKE
SOMETHING, change IT
My involvement in research as a
young person has inspired me to
actively make a difference…
Place your screenshot here