Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Patient and Public Involvement in doctoral research: Reflections and experiences of the PPI contributors and researcher
View through CrossRef
AbstractBackground:Patient and Public Involvement (PPI) has received considerable attention in the last two decades and working in partnership and co-design have now become a prerequisite in health services research in the UK. However, there is a lack of evidence and consistency in recording PPI and related activities. Researchers and PPI contributors are encouraged to record and reflect on the impact of PPI on research. There is significant variation in the way PPI contributors are involved, and it is often limited to some stages of the research cycle than others, without any reflections on the decision-making process for such involvement or any transferable learning. This has resulted in failure to provide a narrative of the research journey including researchers’ and PPI contributors’ personal reflections of involvement. Therefore, this paper provides an exemplar of what PPI in a doctoral research context should look like by providing a detailed account of how PPI was embedded in a doctoral research project, the PPI contributors and researcher’s reflections and key recommendations for involving people specifically in doctoral research.Methods:A reflective approach was taken using data from PPI contributor and researcher notes, e-mail correspondence, meeting notes. Data is presented narratively to reflect on the experiences of involvement throughout the research cycle.Results:Undertaking PPI enhanced the quality and relevance of the doctoral research, contributed to the recruitment of study participants, data analysis and dissemination. Building trust and relationships with PPI contributors was key to continued involvement throughout the life of the project and beyond. There is a need to adopt flexible approaches rather than a one-size-fits-all model when working with PPI contributors. Reflections by PPI contributors and the researcher emphasises that involvement was a rewarding experience. Conclusions: This paper contributes to the wider literature by providing an exemplar of how PPI can be embedded in doctoral research and demonstrates the value of PPI to the research process and the individuals involved. We also present recommendations on how PPI can be incorporated by doctoral and postdoctoral researchers when planning PPI in their research project.
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Title: Patient and Public Involvement in doctoral research: Reflections and experiences of the PPI contributors and researcher
Description:
AbstractBackground:Patient and Public Involvement (PPI) has received considerable attention in the last two decades and working in partnership and co-design have now become a prerequisite in health services research in the UK.
However, there is a lack of evidence and consistency in recording PPI and related activities.
Researchers and PPI contributors are encouraged to record and reflect on the impact of PPI on research.
There is significant variation in the way PPI contributors are involved, and it is often limited to some stages of the research cycle than others, without any reflections on the decision-making process for such involvement or any transferable learning.
This has resulted in failure to provide a narrative of the research journey including researchers’ and PPI contributors’ personal reflections of involvement.
Therefore, this paper provides an exemplar of what PPI in a doctoral research context should look like by providing a detailed account of how PPI was embedded in a doctoral research project, the PPI contributors and researcher’s reflections and key recommendations for involving people specifically in doctoral research.
Methods:A reflective approach was taken using data from PPI contributor and researcher notes, e-mail correspondence, meeting notes.
Data is presented narratively to reflect on the experiences of involvement throughout the research cycle.
Results:Undertaking PPI enhanced the quality and relevance of the doctoral research, contributed to the recruitment of study participants, data analysis and dissemination.
Building trust and relationships with PPI contributors was key to continued involvement throughout the life of the project and beyond.
There is a need to adopt flexible approaches rather than a one-size-fits-all model when working with PPI contributors.
Reflections by PPI contributors and the researcher emphasises that involvement was a rewarding experience.
Conclusions: This paper contributes to the wider literature by providing an exemplar of how PPI can be embedded in doctoral research and demonstrates the value of PPI to the research process and the individuals involved.
We also present recommendations on how PPI can be incorporated by doctoral and postdoctoral researchers when planning PPI in their research project.
Related Results
Patient and public involvement in doctoral research: reflections and experiences of the PPI contributors and researcher
Patient and public involvement in doctoral research: reflections and experiences of the PPI contributors and researcher
Plain English summary
There is evidence in the literature showing that involving patients and the public in health research can have a positive influence on qua...
Patient and Public Involvement in doctoral research: Reflections and experiences of the PPI contributors and researcher
Patient and Public Involvement in doctoral research: Reflections and experiences of the PPI contributors and researcher
Abstract
Background Patient and Public Involvement (PPI) has received considerable attention in the last two decades and working in partnership and co-design have now becom...
Autonomy on Trial
Autonomy on Trial
Photo by CHUTTERSNAP on Unsplash
Abstract
This paper critically examines how US bioethics and health law conceptualize patient autonomy, contrasting the rights-based, individualist...
Doctoral Schools as Learning Organizations: A Polish Perspective
Doctoral Schools as Learning Organizations: A Polish Perspective
Aim/Purpose: The aim of this study is to analyze doctoral schools as a new form of doctoral education in Poland through the prism of the concept of a learning organization. This pa...
Disclosing the Ethnographic Self
Disclosing the Ethnographic Self
We are our own subjects. How our subjectivity becomes entangled in the lives of others is and has always been our topic. (Denzin 27)This article reflects on the process of disclosi...
Validation in Doctoral Education: Exploring PhD Students’ Perceptions of Belonging to Scaffold Doctoral Identity Work
Validation in Doctoral Education: Exploring PhD Students’ Perceptions of Belonging to Scaffold Doctoral Identity Work
Aim/Purpose: The aim of this article is to make a case of the role of validation in doctoral education. The purpose is to detail findings from three studies which explore PhD stude...
Facilitating a Mentoring Programme for Doctoral Students: Insights from Evidence-Based Practice
Facilitating a Mentoring Programme for Doctoral Students: Insights from Evidence-Based Practice
Aim/Purpose: One approach to helping doctoral students deal with the many challenges they face is the provision of a structured mentoring programme to complement the more tradition...
Long-term proton pump inhibitor use and the incidence of gastric cancer: A systematic review and meta-analysis
Long-term proton pump inhibitor use and the incidence of gastric cancer: A systematic review and meta-analysis
Background: There are controverted whether the long-term use of proton pump inhibitors (PPI) will increase the risk of gastric cancer. We performed a meta-analysis to assess the ri...

