What happens after James Lind Alliance Priority Setting Partnerships? A qualitative study of contexts, processes and impacts

Abstract Background The James Lind Alliance (JLA) supports priority setting partnerships (PSPs) in which patients, carers and health professionals collaborate to identify a Top 10 list of research priorities. Few studies have examined how partnerships plan for the post-prioritisation phase, or how c...

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Main Authors: Kristina Staley, Sally Crowe, Joanna C. Crocker, Mary Madden, Trisha Greenhalgh
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2020-07-01
Series:Research Involvement and Engagement
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40900-020-00210-9
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spelling doaj-647938b7c605438eab6f6351ca32c0122020-11-25T03:36:42ZengBMCResearch Involvement and Engagement2056-75292020-07-016111010.1186/s40900-020-00210-9What happens after James Lind Alliance Priority Setting Partnerships? A qualitative study of contexts, processes and impactsKristina Staley0Sally Crowe1Joanna C. Crocker2Mary Madden3Trisha Greenhalgh4TwoCan AssociatesCrowe AssociatesDepartment of Primary Care Health Sciences, University of OxfordDepartment of Health Sciences, University of YorkDepartment of Primary Care Health Sciences, University of OxfordAbstract Background The James Lind Alliance (JLA) supports priority setting partnerships (PSPs) in which patients, carers and health professionals collaborate to identify a Top 10 list of research priorities. Few studies have examined how partnerships plan for the post-prioritisation phase, or how context and post-PSP processes influence the fortunes of priorities. This evaluation aimed to explore these questions. Methods We selected a diverse sample of 20 interviewees who had knowledge of 25 PSPs. Thirteen interviewees had led a PSP, either from a university, patient organisation or charity. Three were patients who had taken part in a PSP workshop. Four others, three researchers and one funder, had worked with JLA PSP priorities to develop research proposals. We analysed the data thematically, exploring how success was understood and achieved. Results The JLA PSPs had different histories, funding sources, goals and stakeholders. Whilst their focus was on generating priority research topics, PSPs’ wider impacts included enhanced status and greater confidence for individuals, as well as relationship-building and network strengthening for the organisations involved. To follow through on a Top 10, additional work was needed to refine broad priority topics into research questions and match them with appropriate funding sources. Commitment to post-PSP action from partners appeared to increase the chance that priority topics would be followed through to funded studies. Academic publications could alert researchers to a PSP’s outputs, but not all PSPs had the capacity to produce them. A Top 10 list potentially influences funding decisions through direct funding, themed calls or as a prompt in open calls. Influence on funders appears to depend on alignment between a priority and the funder’s remit, culture and values. Conclusion The history and context of a JLA PSP have a major influence on its impact. Our findings suggest that there is no universal formula for success, but that greater resource and attention should be given to what happens after prioritisation. Further research is needed on what works best in what circumstances. Overall, we conclude that a wider cultural change in the research world is needed for JLA PSPs to achieve their goal of shaping the research agenda.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40900-020-00210-9Patient and public involvementJames Lind AlliancePriority setting partnershipsResearch priorities
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kristina Staley
Sally Crowe
Joanna C. Crocker
Mary Madden
Trisha Greenhalgh
spellingShingle Kristina Staley
Sally Crowe
Joanna C. Crocker
Mary Madden
Trisha Greenhalgh
What happens after James Lind Alliance Priority Setting Partnerships? A qualitative study of contexts, processes and impacts
Research Involvement and Engagement
Patient and public involvement
James Lind Alliance
Priority setting partnerships
Research priorities
author_facet Kristina Staley
Sally Crowe
Joanna C. Crocker
Mary Madden
Trisha Greenhalgh
author_sort Kristina Staley
title What happens after James Lind Alliance Priority Setting Partnerships? A qualitative study of contexts, processes and impacts
title_short What happens after James Lind Alliance Priority Setting Partnerships? A qualitative study of contexts, processes and impacts
title_full What happens after James Lind Alliance Priority Setting Partnerships? A qualitative study of contexts, processes and impacts
title_fullStr What happens after James Lind Alliance Priority Setting Partnerships? A qualitative study of contexts, processes and impacts
title_full_unstemmed What happens after James Lind Alliance Priority Setting Partnerships? A qualitative study of contexts, processes and impacts
title_sort what happens after james lind alliance priority setting partnerships? a qualitative study of contexts, processes and impacts
publisher BMC
series Research Involvement and Engagement
issn 2056-7529
publishDate 2020-07-01
description Abstract Background The James Lind Alliance (JLA) supports priority setting partnerships (PSPs) in which patients, carers and health professionals collaborate to identify a Top 10 list of research priorities. Few studies have examined how partnerships plan for the post-prioritisation phase, or how context and post-PSP processes influence the fortunes of priorities. This evaluation aimed to explore these questions. Methods We selected a diverse sample of 20 interviewees who had knowledge of 25 PSPs. Thirteen interviewees had led a PSP, either from a university, patient organisation or charity. Three were patients who had taken part in a PSP workshop. Four others, three researchers and one funder, had worked with JLA PSP priorities to develop research proposals. We analysed the data thematically, exploring how success was understood and achieved. Results The JLA PSPs had different histories, funding sources, goals and stakeholders. Whilst their focus was on generating priority research topics, PSPs’ wider impacts included enhanced status and greater confidence for individuals, as well as relationship-building and network strengthening for the organisations involved. To follow through on a Top 10, additional work was needed to refine broad priority topics into research questions and match them with appropriate funding sources. Commitment to post-PSP action from partners appeared to increase the chance that priority topics would be followed through to funded studies. Academic publications could alert researchers to a PSP’s outputs, but not all PSPs had the capacity to produce them. A Top 10 list potentially influences funding decisions through direct funding, themed calls or as a prompt in open calls. Influence on funders appears to depend on alignment between a priority and the funder’s remit, culture and values. Conclusion The history and context of a JLA PSP have a major influence on its impact. Our findings suggest that there is no universal formula for success, but that greater resource and attention should be given to what happens after prioritisation. Further research is needed on what works best in what circumstances. Overall, we conclude that a wider cultural change in the research world is needed for JLA PSPs to achieve their goal of shaping the research agenda.
topic Patient and public involvement
James Lind Alliance
Priority setting partnerships
Research priorities
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40900-020-00210-9
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