Does engaging patients in research projects improve health? A comprehensive collection of 17 innovative Demonstration projects – from youth involvement in mental health services to suicide prevention, Indigenous health, children with complex medical needs and more – highlights the value of patient engagement in research.
Engaging Patients in Health Research: the Ontario Experience, a special patient-oriented research supplement in the Canadian Medical Association Journal, features in-the-trenches experiences, tips and challenges from 17 IMPACT projects funded by the Ontario SPOR Support Unit (OSSU). It is a resource for researchers and others interested in this growing approach that involves patients and caregivers as partners in health and health systems research.
“The innovative, collaborative approach of these projects underscores Ontario’s role as a leader in putting patients first and in seeking ways to improve patient health and the way health care is delivered,” says Professor Adalsteinn Brown, Chair, OSSU’s Board of Directors and DLSPH Dean.
Dean Steini Brown served as Chair of the the Ontario SPOR Support Unit’s Board of Directors.
IMPACT projects will live up to their name as they will impact the way we deliver health care, from emergency services to mental health, hip fracture care to heart failure care and more,” said Brown.
Lived experience of patients and caregivers can make health research more relevant to patient needs by focusing on patient-identified priorities which can improve health and the health system.
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In 2014, OSSU issued a call to fund translational research projects that aimed to conduct Innovative, Measurable, Patient-oriented, Appropriate, Collaborative and Transformative (IMPACT) research to improve patient health in Ontario. The complete list of 17 IMPACT projects in pediatrics, mental health, Indigenous health, chronic disease and health systems research is available here.
“Just as the patient experience in clinical care is important, so too is the patient perspective in research,” says Dr. Diane Kelsall, Editor-in-Chief (Acting), CMAJ. “Asking patients and families about what is important to them results in better research studies that address patient health priorities which can benefit the health system. CMAJ sees patient-oriented research as an important, emerging research area and we hope this supplement will be a resource for researchers.”
Funding bodies such as the National Institute for Health Research in the United Kingdom and the Patient-Centred Outcome Research Institute (PCORI) in the United States are supporting patient-oriented research, along with the Canadian Institutes for Health Research (CIHR). Journals are increasingly asking how patients were involved in the research. CMAJ Open, a sister journal to CMAJ, has launched a patient-oriented research section to attract and publish this type of research.
“Engaging patients as partners makes them active, rather than passive, participants whose experience and ideas can enrich research projects,” says Frank Gavin, Patient Partner and Chair, Citizen Engagement Council for the CHILD-BRIGHT SPOR Network. “We hope this publication will be a resource to anyone interested in conducting patient-oriented research.”
NT5