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Researchers provide framework for creating research advisory board for psychosis research studies

board room
Credit: Unsplash/CC0 Public Domain

Community engagement is important for developing research involving patients with mental illness, and funding agencies are increasingly requiring such engagement. However, many researchers are unable to pursue advisory boards with people with lived experience with mental illness, including psychotic disorders, due to financial and time constraints on the researchers and individuals who prefer limited participation burdens.

To address these gaps, McLean Hospital's Division of Psychotic Disorders has created a standing research as a shared resource for researchers, which they can utilize for feedback at any phase of a research project. This novel model was designed to provide a flexible alternative to research boards created for single studies, in which and researchers can connect to improve the quality of their research and align with the needs of the community their research aims to serve.

A new paper published in Psychiatric Services describes five steps McLean took to form its research advisory board that the authors hope can serve as a guide for other mental illness researchers looking to engage the patient community. They include:

  1. Consult community members
  2. Define goals and scope
  3. Select board members
  4. Plan board operations
  5. Consider board sustainability

The authors also collected feedback from researchers on their experience with McLean's research advisory board, with nine of out 10 respondents saying they planned to adjust their research based on the board's feedback. Their paper also offers tips on avoiding potential conflicts of interest and details future research goals of collecting long-term outcomes data on the effectiveness of the boards.

"Engaging people with lived experience with when developing research is crucial, yet many researchers do not regularly seek feedback from the community when creating and executing their studies," said lead study author Julie M. McCarthy, Ph.D., a staff psychologist in the Division of Psychotic Disorders at McLean Hospital.

"Developing a standing research advisory board as a shared resource will stand to benefit future research efforts and reduce some of the impractical considerations around creating an advisory board for a single study."

More information: Julie M. McCarthy et al, Creation of a Psychotic Disorders Research Advisory Board as a Shared Resource, Psychiatric Services (2024). DOI: 10.1176/appi.ps.20230328

Journal information: Psychiatric Services
Provided by McLean Hospital
Citation: Researchers provide framework for creating research advisory board for psychosis research studies (2024, January 25) retrieved 25 June 2024 from https://medicalxpress.com/news/2024-01-framework-advisory-board-psychosis.html
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