Are we asking the right questions? Working with the LGBTQ+ community to prioritise healthcare research themes.
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Authors
Crowe, Sally
Barker, Eleanor
Roberts, Meg
Lloyd, Lucy
de Barros, Clara M
Rebelo-Harris, Ben
Meads, Catherine
Publication Date
2021-09-24Journal Title
Research involvement and engagement
ISSN
2056-7529
Volume
7
Issue
1
Language
eng
Type
Article
This Version
VoR
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Crowe, S., Barker, E., Roberts, M., Lloyd, L., de Barros, C. M., Rebelo-Harris, B., Meads, C., & et al. (2021). Are we asking the right questions? Working with the LGBTQ+ community to prioritise healthcare research themes.. Research involvement and engagement, 7 (1) https://doi.org/10.1186/s40900-021-00298-7
Abstract
<h4>Background</h4>Conversations about research priorities with members of the public are rarely designed specifically to include people who identify as Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender and Queer (LGBTQ+) and are not researchers.<h4>Methods</h4>Generally, to address this gap, and specifically, to inform future research for CLS, we carried out a rapid review of published research priority sets covering LGBTQ+ topics, and an online workshop to prioritise identified themes.<h4>Results</h4>Rapid review: results. The rapid review identified 18 LGBTQ+ research priority sets. Some focussed on specific populations such as women or men, younger or older people or people living within families. Five addressed transgender and gender non- conforming populations. All of the research priority sets originated from English-speaking, high and middle-income countries (UK, US, Canada, and Australia), and date from 2016 onwards. Prioritization approaches were wide-ranging from personal commentary to expert workshops and surveys. Participants involved in setting priorities mostly included research academics, health practitioners and advocacy organisations, two studies involved LGBTQ+ public in their process. Research priorities identified in this review were then grouped into themes which were prioritised during the workshop. Workshop: results. For the workshop, participants were recruited using local (Cambridge, UK) LGBTQ+ networks and a national advert to a public involvement in research matching website to take part in an online discussion workshop. Those that took part were offered payment for their time in preparing for the workshop and taking part. Participants personal priorities and experiences contributed to a consensus development process and a final ranked list of seven research themes and participants' experiences of healthcare, mental health advocacy, care homes, caring responsibilities, schools and family units added additional context.<h4>Conclusions</h4>From the workshop the three research themes prioritised were: healthcare services delivery, prevention, and particular challenges / intersectionality of multiple challenges for people identifying as LGBTQ+. Research themes interconnected in many ways and this was demonstrated by the comments from workshop participants. This paper offers insights into why these priorities were important from participants' perspectives and detail about how to run an inclusive and respectful public involvement research exercise. On a practical level these themes will directly inform future research direction for CLS.
Keywords
Research priorities, Rapid Review, Public Involvement, Research Priority Setting, Lgbt (Q+)
Sponsorship
NIHR School for Primary Care Research (SPCR-2014-10043 Capacity Building Award 10a)
Identifiers
PMC8460395, 34556178
External DOI: https://doi.org/10.1186/s40900-021-00298-7
This record's URL: https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/329893
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