What Patients Prioritize for Research to Improve Their Lives and How Their Priorities Get Dismissed again
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Context: Learning Community on Patient-Led Care
2.2. Methods and Analysis: Participatory Health Research
2.3. Author Team
3. Results
3.1. Topics on the Patient Agenda
3.1.1. Awareness for Misuse of Power and Abuse
“Our relationship? When it’s good, it’s very good. When it’s terrible, it’s very terrible. We can hurt each other a lot, but we also mean everything to each other. We will never forget that this is an abusive relationship, and like many abusive relationships, people fall away until at the end you are left with just the two of you.”.A couple who receives community care
“Eventually, a group of 6–10 care professionals stood in the hallway to possibly jump on me. I found it threatening myself that they were all standing there. Then I ran away. Out of the door. The police went after me. I was taken away in handcuffs to the ambulance. Too bad. I found this very traumatic. I was crying. This is bad. I see that in the experiences of others too.”.A patient of emergency care
“Care professionals ask at the start of counseling if sexuality should be a topic in counseling. If the checkmark is ‘off,’ it is never brought up again. However, this can change in practice. Situations and wishes can change. But they do not. If the checkmark is ‘off,’ the topic is never brought up again. Although things happened…”.A patient of community care
“Nowadays, you can’t just trust people. That’s why I don’t have any friends really. I used to go through a lot with friends, so you think...”.A woman with a learning disability in an interview
3.1.2. Meaningful Participation
“When you are considered a vulnerable person, you have to work incredibly hard to be still able to do what you want to do. For example, if you’re in a wheelchair, they talk about you with the person who pushes the wheelchair. Then you don’t matter. So precisely when you’re vulnerable, you have to work harder to matter still. Because of the vulnerability.”.A person with a physical disability in community care
“I worked at the X [an organization that supports homeless people]. That was the only place I could go for a job. But those are all homeless people. I just wanted to get out of that circle. I slept with addicts and drug dealers. I wanted to get away from that. So I’d rather not go back into that again.”.A woman with a psychiatric vulnerability
“I could start there, but on an on-call basis. (...) That doesn’t really work for someone who needs a lot of structure.”.A man with a psychiatric vulnerability
“I used to go to the snack bar a lot. But that all costs money. Sometimes I go to my mother’s house for dinner a few times a week. My mother has an eye disease. I will take her to the hospital then. And sometimes she needs help reading because of her sight. Then I do that. Then I read to her.”.A patient with a psychiatric vulnerability
“I have many friends who keep coming. I am very proud of that. Sometimes I say, if it’s too much trouble, you don’t have to. But they even say, I look forward to it. It is always so nice. (...) They come here for fun. Thank goodness. They are busy enough.”.Woman with community care
3.1.3. Non-Human Assistance
“Pills. Yes, I get those from the family doctor. But I don’t take them. I don’t want to. That’s junk. but yes, I’m still in that pain.”.A woman who frequently comes to the GP
“I can have a job due to voice-recognition software connected with my smartphone on my wheelchair. I write emails, and call people with the Siri assistant. I can organize my life from my smartphone. This makes me less independent of care.”.Man with assistive technology and community care
“I still have one cat, and luckily, she is very stable now, and I am very grateful for that. The other two, I had to finish their lives. Both had a cancerous tumor. Finally, the tumors killed them. They were so involved and intertwined with me because I cared so much about them, and they were my best therapists who helped me out of a deep valley and kept me on track.”.A woman with a psychiatric vulnerability
3.1.4. Peer-Support
“You can tell your other friends, but they won’t understand. You feel supported, since you are not the only one.”.Adolescent with a respiratory disease
“Experiential experts are currently being used more and more in psychiatry. However, these have different statuses and power. The exchange is no longer ‘really’ reciprocal, like with peers.”.The second author in an analysis work session
“I had an interview with an elderly lady that the kids did everything for. She felt like she couldn’t do anything anymore. And then she saw me. A man in a wheelchair with many more limitations. And he comes independently by cab and does research. This inspired her enormously. She couldn’t imagine a situation where she would ever have such a role, but I gave her hope for the future.”.Fourth author in a work session
3.2. Reactions of Stakeholders on the Topics of the Agenda
3.2.1. Attention for Misuse of Power and Abuse
“Sexual abuse is still related to rapists—man in bushes. Or nowadays, people think of #MeToo. Men who rape in a working relationship. However, most abuse comes from men in relational sphere. At home. In families. Many professionals do not know this or understand that their patients are one of those people who are a victim. They often do now know what to do to empower these women.”.Change agent who summarizes the discussion in a dialogue session
3.2.2. Meaningful Participation
“The titles of your reports ‘Not only participation works, but meaningful participation works’ and ‘Self-reliance, thanks to care’ make it clear to us that the principles of our policy work out differently in practice. This is an eye-opener for us.”.An municipality civil servant
3.2.3. Non-Human Assistance
“There are two types of assistance dogs: more task-oriented and more sensitive dogs. The task-oriented dogs are used by people, for example, with vision impairments and police and ambulance personnel. The more sensitive dogs are more focused on interdependence and working with people with trauma, veterans and/or psychotic symptoms. In uniform professions, people who work with these dogs increasingly receive financial assistance to purchase dogs. Unfortunately, this is not the case for patients with psychosis susceptibility or PTTS. However, dogs can play a vital role in reducing re-experiences of the traumas, panic attacks, and expensive compulsory treatment, and can prevent traumatic admissions. In addition, assistance dogs can provide a solution since the new law in the mental health sector, where patients are forcibly treated at home. Patients today are often administered their mandatory medication at home, where their own home is no longer considered a safe place. The assistance dog can help to experience and support safety. Unfortunately, psychiatry is still secondary to the care of people with visible disabilities or physical impairments. That’s also where the money for research is. That’s where the priority lies. Moreover, many do not see animals as complete: people can do it better, they think.”.One of the co-researchers after the unsuccessful process of funding a proposal on assistance dogs for patients with psychosis susceptibility and or other mental health issues
3.2.4. Peer Support
“Initiating an advisory board with patients is already a big deal in the department. But now, we also have to do something with the advice of these people. That is often quite difficult to achieve. So working together with experts by experience or peer support groups is a bridge too far.”.Physician in an academic hospital
“The fact that we are researching patients’ experiences in psychiatric crises is already very innovative. If we do participatory research, I am not taken seriously. In the department here, hierarchy is still important and also the gold standard of medical research. It is challenging to fit participatory research in this system. Maybe in a few years...”.Emergency care professional in an academic hospital
4. Discussion
Available knowledge on patients’ priorities, and an action-orientation that is missing.
How the priorities set by patients was dismissed again.
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Field of Experience | Participants and Co-Researchers | Methods | Patients Involved | Stakeholders Involved | Year | Dissemination | Funder |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Community care | Patients with chronic diseases, physical impairments and older adults | Interviews and a dialogue session with stakeholders about the findings | n = 32 | n = 14 | 2014–2015 | Report [34] | A municipality |
Older patients with community care | n = 29 | n = 5 | 2016 | Report [35] | Care organization | ||
All patients with community care | n = 85, | n = 79 | 2017 | Report [36] | A municipality | ||
Informal caregivers | n = 49 | n = 23 | 2016 | Report [37] | |||
Informal caregivers of patients with dementia | n = 19 | n = 25 | 2016 | Report [38] | Social work organization | ||
Patients with a learning disability | n = 20 | n = 14 | 2015–2016 | Report [39] | A municipality | ||
n = 20 | n = 30 | 2017 | Report [40] | ||||
n = 15 | n = 8 | 2019 | Report [41] | ||||
Patients with a psychiatric vulnerability | n = 5 | n = 17 | 2015 | Report [42] | |||
Patients who are dependent on assistive technology | n = 6 | n = 4 | 2018–2020 | Video [43] | Charitable foundation | ||
General practicians (GPs) | Frequent users of GPs | n = 17 | n = 5 | 2019 | Web text [44] | Health insurance company | |
Emergency psychiatric care | Patients who want to be admitted voluntarily | n = 17 | n = 32 | 2019 | Report [45] | Health insurance company | |
Patients in psychiatric crisis | n = 17 | n = 28 | 2017–2018 | Report and articles [46,47] | Two psychiatric care institutions | ||
Social work and public health | People ageing at home | n = 40 | n = 14 | 2016–2020 | Report [48] | A municipality & Applied University | |
Patients in COVID-19 isolation | (Online) Group sessions with session with stakeholders about the findings | n = 9 | n = 21 | 2020 | Report [49] | Dutch Health Research Fund | |
People living in poverty | n = 6 | n = 25 | 2018 | Report and articles [50,51,52] | Charitable foundation | ||
People without a job | n = 10 | n = 19 | 2018–2019 | Report and article [53,54] | A municipality | ||
Hospital care | Youngsters with a respiratory disease | n = 8 | n = 4 | 2018–2020 | Article [55] | Dutch Foundation for Asthma Prevention |
Research Agenda of Patients | Explanation |
---|---|
Misuse of power and abuse | The misuse of power of (informal) caregivers and relatives on patients, with abuse (sexual, emotional, physical, financial) as a result |
Meaningful participation | Support for patients to participate in a way that they are seen, heard, and belong to a bigger whole |
Non-human assistance | Ways to implement alternatives support like assistance dogs and smart assistive technology |
Peer support | Implementation on peer support and peer workers in settings like adolescent care, care for people with chronic illnesses or a learning disability, community care, and support for informal caregivers |
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Groot, B.; Haveman, A.; Buree, M.; Zuijlen, R.v.; Zuijlen, J.v.; Abma, T. What Patients Prioritize for Research to Improve Their Lives and How Their Priorities Get Dismissed again. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2022, 19, 1927. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19041927
Groot B, Haveman A, Buree M, Zuijlen Rv, Zuijlen Jv, Abma T. What Patients Prioritize for Research to Improve Their Lives and How Their Priorities Get Dismissed again. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2022; 19(4):1927. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19041927
Chicago/Turabian StyleGroot, Barbara, Annyk Haveman, Mireille Buree, Ruud van Zuijlen, Juliette van Zuijlen, and Tineke Abma. 2022. "What Patients Prioritize for Research to Improve Their Lives and How Their Priorities Get Dismissed again" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 19, no. 4: 1927. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19041927
APA StyleGroot, B., Haveman, A., Buree, M., Zuijlen, R. v., Zuijlen, J. v., & Abma, T. (2022). What Patients Prioritize for Research to Improve Their Lives and How Their Priorities Get Dismissed again. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 19(4), 1927. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19041927