Back to Search Start Over

Factors to Consider During Identification and Invitation of Individuals in a Multi-stakeholder Research Partnership

Authors :
Roses Parker
Eve Tomlinson
Thomas W. Concannon
Elie Akl
Jennifer Petkovic
Vivian A. Welch
Sally Crowe
Marisha Palm
Ana Marusic
Comfort Ekanem
Imad Bou Akl
Michael Saginur
Lorenzo Moja
Tanja Kuchenmüller
Nevilene Slingers
Ligia Teixeira
Laura Dormer
Eddy Lang
Thurayya Arayssi
Regina Greer-Smith
Asma Ben Brahem
Marc Avey
Peter Tugwell
Source :
Parker, R, Tomlinson, E, Concannon, T, Akl, E, Petkovic, J, Welch, V, Crowe, S, Palm, M, Marusic, A, Ekanem, C, Bou Akl, I, Saginur, M, Moja, L, Kuchenmüller, T, Slingers, N, Teixeira, L, Dormer, L, Lang, E, Arayssi, T, Greer-Smith, R, Ben Brahem, A, Avey, M & Tugwell, P 2022, ' Factors to Consider During Identification and Invitation of Individuals in a Multi-stakeholder Research Partnership ', Journal of General Internal Medicine, vol. 37, no. 16, pp. 4047-4053 . https://doi.org/10.1007/s11606-022-07411-w
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2022.

Abstract

Background Health research teams increasingly partner with stakeholders to produce research that is relevant, accessible, and widely used. Previous work has covered stakeholder group identification. Objective We aimed to develop factors for health research teams to consider during identification and invitation of individual representatives in a multi-stakeholder research partnership, with the aim of forming equitable and informed teams. Design Consensus development. Participants We involved 16 stakeholders from the international Multi-Stakeholder Engagement (MuSE) Consortium, including patients and the public, providers, payers of health services/purchasers, policy makers, programme managers, peer review editors, and principal investigators. Approach We engaged stakeholders in factor development and as co-authors of this manuscript. Using a modified Delphi approach, we gathered stakeholder views concerning a preliminary list of 18 factors. Over two feedback rounds, using qualitative and quantitative analysis, we concentrated these into ten factors. Key Results We present seven highly desirable factors: ‘expertise or experience’, ‘ability and willingness to represent the stakeholder group’, ‘inclusivity (equity, diversity and intersectionality)’, ‘communication skills’, ‘commitment and time capacity’, ‘financial and non-financial relationships and activities, and conflict of interest’, ‘training support and funding needs’. Additionally, three factors are desirable: ‘influence’, ‘research relevant values’, ‘previous stakeholder engagement’. Conclusions We present factors for research teams to consider during identification and invitation of individual representatives in a multi-stakeholder research partnership. Policy makers and guideline developers may benefit from considering the factors in stakeholder identification and invitation. Research funders may consider stipulating consideration of the factors in funding applications. We outline how these factors can be implemented and exemplify how their use has the potential to improve the quality and relevancy of health research.

Details

ISSN :
15251497 and 08848734
Volume :
37
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of General Internal Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....8f2c7841800ad7eaad62830400f42531
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11606-022-07411-w