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Establishing a research partnership to investigate functional loss and rehabilitation towards the end of life

Maddocks, Matthew; Brighton, Lisa Jane; Connell, Louise; Cowley, Alison; Laird, Barry; Peryer, Guy; Petrasso, Carmine; Ziegler, Lucy; Harwood, Rowan

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Authors

Matthew Maddocks

Lisa Jane Brighton

Louise Connell

Alison Cowley

Barry Laird

Guy Peryer

Carmine Petrasso

Lucy Ziegler



Abstract

Background
Functional loss, the inability to perform necessary or desired tasks, is a common consequence of life-limiting illnesses and associated symptoms (pain, fatigue, breathlessness, etc.) and causes suffering for patients and families. Rehabilitation, a set of interventions designed to address functional loss, is recognised as essential within palliative care, as it can improve quality of life and reduce care costs. However, not everyone has equal access to rehabilitation. Despite limited life expectancy or uncertain ability to benefit from interventions, palliative rehabilitation services are often absent. This is partly due to a lack of high-quality research around optimal models of rehabilitation. Research in this area is methodologically challenging and requires multidisciplinary and cross-speciality collaboration.
Aim and objectives
We aimed to establish and grow a United Kingdom research partnership across diverse areas, commencing with partners from Edinburgh, East Anglia, Lancashire, Leeds, London and Nottingham, around the topic area of functional loss and rehabilitation in palliative and end-of-life care. The objectives were to (1) develop a multidisciplinary, cross-speciality research partnership, (2) generate high-priority unanswered research questions with stakeholders, (3) co-design and submit high-quality competitive research proposals, including (4) sharing topic and methodological expertise, and (5) to build capacity and capability to deliver nationally generalisable studies.
Activities
The partnership was established with professionals from across England and Scotland with complementary areas of expertise including complex palliative and geriatric research, physiotherapy, nursing, palliative medicine and psychology. Research questions were generated through a modified version of the Child Health and Nutrition Research Initiative, which allowed for the collation and refinement of research questions relating to functional loss and rehabilitation towards the end of life. Partnership members were supported through a series of workshops to transform research ideas into proposals for submission to stage one calls by the National Institute for Health and Care Research. The partnership not only supported students, clinicians and public members with training opportunities but also supported clinicians in securing protected time from clinical duties to allow them to focus on developing local research initiatives.
Reflections
Through our partnership we established a network that offered researchers, clinicians, students and public members the chance to develop novel skills and explore opportunities for personal and professional development around the topic area of functional loss and rehabilitation in palliative and end-of-life care. The partnership was crucial to foster collaboration and facilitate exchange of ideas, knowledge and experiences to build joint research study proposals.

Citation

Maddocks, M., Brighton, L. J., Connell, L., Cowley, A., Laird, B., Peryer, G., Petrasso, C., Ziegler, L., & Harwood, R. (2024). Establishing a research partnership to investigate functional loss and rehabilitation towards the end of life. Health Technology Assessment, 1-12. https://doi.org/10.3310/pthc7598

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Apr 1, 2024
Publication Date 2024-04
Deposit Date Jun 28, 2024
Publicly Available Date Jul 2, 2024
Journal Health Technology Assessment
Print ISSN 1366-5278
Publisher NIHR Journals Library
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Pages 1-12
DOI https://doi.org/10.3310/pthc7598
Public URL https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/34351024