when things don’t go to plan: the realities and challenges of user involvement in research dr...

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When things don’t go to plan: The realities and challenges of user involvement in research Dr Tracey Williamson Research Fellow - Older People/User Involvement Salford Centre for Nursing, Midwifery & Collaborative Research

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Page 1: When things don’t go to plan: The realities and challenges of user involvement in research Dr Tracey Williamson Research Fellow - Older People/User Involvement

When things don’t go to plan:

The realities and challenges of user

involvement in research

Dr Tracey Williamson

Research Fellow - Older People/User Involvement

Salford Centre for Nursing, Midwifery & Collaborative Research

Page 2: When things don’t go to plan: The realities and challenges of user involvement in research Dr Tracey Williamson Research Fellow - Older People/User Involvement

Introduction

During the session I hope we reach some answers to the following questions:

Why is this topic important? What are the challenges for ‘professionals’

working with ‘users’ Between us have we got any real-life

examples we have learnt from? How can we manage these issues better in

future?

Page 3: When things don’t go to plan: The realities and challenges of user involvement in research Dr Tracey Williamson Research Fellow - Older People/User Involvement

Aliens and earthlings? A word about labels

Page 4: When things don’t go to plan: The realities and challenges of user involvement in research Dr Tracey Williamson Research Fellow - Older People/User Involvement

Why is this topic important?

Professionals are encouraged to ‘do’ user involvement

Some are well placed to do it There is an expectation that they can ‘How to do it’ is a recent concern How to do it well is a growing concern Examples of doing it well abound Less public are tales of things that did not go to plan Who cares for the researcher? - often lone and/or

participatory Is involvement common sense or an art?

Page 5: When things don’t go to plan: The realities and challenges of user involvement in research Dr Tracey Williamson Research Fellow - Older People/User Involvement

What are the challenges for professionals working with users?

Working in equal partnership Being empowering Differing expectations Choice of who to work with Emotional labour – I’m a thinking feeling person

locked in the body of a professional!

Page 6: When things don’t go to plan: The realities and challenges of user involvement in research Dr Tracey Williamson Research Fellow - Older People/User Involvement

The emotional labour: Real life examples

Dealing with: Sabotage – older people as co-researchers Withdrawal – patient representative co-researchers Failure (funding, users’ influence) – co-applicants Orchestrating it to happen – advisors

Page 7: When things don’t go to plan: The realities and challenges of user involvement in research Dr Tracey Williamson Research Fellow - Older People/User Involvement

Mini case study group activity – sabotageThe setting - regular team meetings with university researchers and lay researchers, study 18 months +:

One member is: DisruptiveCritical – negatives not positivesInappropriate about own peer groupDis-charitableInfluencing peersFostering a ‘them and us’ climateTarring all researchers with same brushWhispering

How would you deal with this situation?

Page 8: When things don’t go to plan: The realities and challenges of user involvement in research Dr Tracey Williamson Research Fellow - Older People/User Involvement

Mini case study group activity – withdrawalThe setting - Regular team meetings with university researchers and lay researchers; study 14 months +:

One user member by email: Suddenly declares user involvement principles being ignoredSuggests professional team members taking overInforms leaving with immediate effect

How would you deal with this situation?

Page 9: When things don’t go to plan: The realities and challenges of user involvement in research Dr Tracey Williamson Research Fellow - Older People/User Involvement

What we did………………..

Page 10: When things don’t go to plan: The realities and challenges of user involvement in research Dr Tracey Williamson Research Fellow - Older People/User Involvement

Mini case study group activity – sabotageLay researchers took over chair role to diffuse power and illuminate challenge of chairing, changed seating arrangements (uni researchers spread out), arrived early to set meeting tone, avoided engaging in grumbling, encourage own meetings/time with no uni presence, revisited ground rules, drew line under year end – symbolic fresh start

Mini case study group activity – withdrawalEmailed back, spoke to team, checked out other user views, explored learning/changed practice (more users next project – too late now), follow up call by non-team member, careful minuting of meeting, re-checked notes and tape of reflection interview held with team members

Page 11: When things don’t go to plan: The realities and challenges of user involvement in research Dr Tracey Williamson Research Fellow - Older People/User Involvement

Mini case study group activity – co-applicantsIdea from lay people 2004, through formal NSF group so needed responding to, Stroke Club visit, failed Trust bid, research bid after encouragement from Stroke Association, failed bid, attempt to link with stroke researchers, missed opportunity -Trust addressing now

Mini case study group activity – advisorsChallenge to engage interest, careful emails to European Commission/NPSA/SHA/PCT/User Forum, user meeting to gain insight and support, meeting to gain user involvement, seek funding and research partners, choice of involvement (advisory/tool design), evolving design options to fit other stakeholder interests not user views

Page 12: When things don’t go to plan: The realities and challenges of user involvement in research Dr Tracey Williamson Research Fellow - Older People/User Involvement

Effects these issues have had personally

Walking on egg-shells – to the point of self-disempowerment Wanting to stay in bed – but have a paid job to do Tears, rants and scolded pets, children and partners Late nights and prioritising involvement work over other

work and family commitments Tempted to do clinical trials research instead

On a more positive note: Has encouraged discussion and coping strategies Support network being set up for colleagues Good practice examples shared e.g. discussing

relationships, revisiting ground rules

Page 13: When things don’t go to plan: The realities and challenges of user involvement in research Dr Tracey Williamson Research Fellow - Older People/User Involvement

Personal conclusions

We should not empower others to the detriment of ourselves – needs to be a ‘win win’

In future, make clear to users we all have feelings, rights and expectations and to discuss these

Bust the myth - not all users are nice people Sometimes you have to work with what you’ve got

- but some ‘selection process’ may well be appropriate

We need to develop the evidence base for involvement – what worked and why AND what didn’t work and why

Page 14: When things don’t go to plan: The realities and challenges of user involvement in research Dr Tracey Williamson Research Fellow - Older People/User Involvement

Thank you for listening

Dr Tracey Williamson

Research Fellow

University of Salford

[email protected]

Tel 0161 295 6424