1 / 14

Elizabeth Mitchell Christopher McKevitt Stroke Research Patients & Family Group

What does stroke research look like now? Patients, carers and researchers reflect on three years of involvement. Elizabeth Mitchell Christopher McKevitt Stroke Research Patients & Family Group. Outline. About the King’s College London Stroke Research Patients and Family Group

peggy
Download Presentation

Elizabeth Mitchell Christopher McKevitt Stroke Research Patients & Family Group

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. What does stroke research look like now?Patients, carers and researchers reflect on three years of involvement Elizabeth Mitchell Christopher McKevitt Stroke Research Patients & Family Group

  2. Outline • About the King’s College London Stroke Research Patients and Family Group • What’s worked well and not so well? • perspectives of Group members • perspectives of stroke researchers • What are we achieving?

  3. Kings’ College London Stroke Research Programme • Epidemiology • Health service quality • Health service development • Social science studies of patient, carer, provider experience

  4. The South London Stroke Register • 1995 - • Inner city London • 300 people with first ever stroke per year • About 4000 recruited to date

  5. Southwark Lambeth South London Stroke Register Study Area

  6. Stroke Research Patients & Family Group • 2005 • Stroke survivors and family members • Most take part in SLSR • KCL stroke researchers

  7. Activities • 6 weekly meetings • Pilot study - costs of stroke for individuals and family members • Redesigned study information booklet & consent form • Biannual research newsletter

  8. What do Group members get out of taking part? • Social aspect • Information from others with experience of stroke • An atmosphere of acceptance • Knowledge and confidence

  9. What has the Group achieved? • We know what services we should be aiming to achieve • Our expectations have grown as a result of exchange of ideas in the group • We are encouraged to think bigger about the power we have to influence things

  10. What do researchers think the Group is for? • have established an on-going relationship with stroke service users • improves your research • are fulfilling duty to engage with service users/public

  11. What has worked well? • The Group has developed into a stable network of people • Pilot study of costs of stroke • Group members are unpaid volunteers • keeps the group informal • gives you the freedom to say what you think

  12. Some problems and questions • Need to use the meetings not just to talk about “What happened to me” but what we as a group can collectively do about it • More training to become more “professional” in our approach • As a group we need to know a little more about the practicalities of research so our contribution can be more effective • Lack of feedback

  13. Some problems and questions • Some researchers are nervous about speaking to stroke service users in our meetings, where they are not in control: need encouragement & support • Need to use the meetings not just to talk about what’s happened to me but what we as a group can collectively do about it • Funding – user involvement levy

  14. Conclusions • Stroke researchers’ ideas about involving service users are evolving • The group is evolving • Overlapping purposes • Evaluation of our experience

More Related