Abstract

BackgroundThis paper presents a user involvement process, called needs-led research, conducted as a part of a doctoral degree project aiming to explore research priorities and, ultimately, to develop a final top 10 list of questions relevant to the field of research. There is evidence of a mismatch between what user groups within a research field find relevant to study and what is actually being done. User involvement is a method that can accommodate this, and there is a growing attention and amount of research in this field based on an understanding that people who receive health care services, and their next of kin and clinicians, are uniquely positioned to contribute to research in order to understand their experiences better and improve the services. This paper presents a user involvement process in a small-scale study, referred to as needs-led research, which concerns the ‘performance of the trust model in community home-based health care services’. The process was conducted as part of a doctoral degree project.MethodThe needs-led research process is inspired by the James Lind Alliance (JLA), which focuses on bringing together service users, next of kin and clinicians on equal terms to explore research priorities. The process consisted of five-steps, each of which involved representatives from service users, next of kin and clinicians: 1) narrowing down the theme; 2) steering group meeting; 3) gathering input through a survey; 4) data processing and interim priority setting; and 5) final priority setting.ResultsAlmost 200 participants contributed during the five steps, 294 inputs were gathered, and 35 participants voted for the top 10 list. The top 10 list is presented.ConclusionThis paper provides an example of how user involvement can be employed to devise research questions that are relevant for clinicians, service users, next of kin and service providers concerning the ‘performance of the trust model in home-based health care’. It also outlines some strengths and limitations of the process. The needs-led research process shows that user involvement in research is feasible for developing research questions in small-scale studies. We hope that the top 10 list presented will encourage future research to address issues of importance regarding the performance of the trust model in community home-based health care services.

Highlights

  • This paper presents a user involvement process, called needs-led research, conducted as a part of a doctoral degree project aiming to explore research priorities and, to develop a final top 10 list of questions relevant to the field of research

  • This paper provides an example of how user involvement can be employed to devise research questions that are relevant for clinicians, service users, of kin and service providers concerning the ‘performance of the trust model in home-based health care’

  • We hope that the top 10 list presented will encourage future research to address issues of importance regarding the performance of the trust model in community home-based health care services

Read more

Summary

Introduction

This paper presents a user involvement process, called needs-led research, conducted as a part of a doctoral degree project aiming to explore research priorities and, to develop a final top 10 list of questions relevant to the field of research. The trust model is a new way of organising home-based health care services where trust is described as a strategy and work method aimed at involving service users and of kin in decisions that concern them, and trusting clinicians’ professional judgement to a greater extent when it comes to assessing the need for services and adjusting them if the user’s health changes. This thereby makes the services individually tailored and more flexible [16]. The trust model constitutes a new way of organising home-based health care services, and little knowledge exists about what the service providers employing the model, or the service users and of kin, consider relevant to study, making it appropriate to implement a user involvement process

Objectives
Methods
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call