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Reporting of patient and public involvement and engagement (PPIE) in clinical trials published in nursing science journals: a descriptive study

Richard Gray, Catherine Brasier, Tessa‐May Zirnsak, Ashley Ng

2021Research Involvement and Engagement39 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Patient and Public Involvement and Engagement (PPIE) in research positively affects the relevance, quality, and impact of research. Around 11% of studies published in leading medical journals demonstrate PPIE. The extent of PPIE in nursing research has not been previously studied. METHODS: A descriptive study of PPIE in clinical trials published in general nursing science journals between 1st January and 31st August 2021. Data were extracted from included studies against the five items of the Guidance for Reporting Involvement of Patients and the Public (GRIPP2) short form reporting checklist. RESULTS: We searched 27 journals and identified 89 randomised controlled clinical trials. There was no statement or evidence of PPIE in any of the included trials. CONCLUSION: Nurse researchers need to ensure that they purposefully involve patients in their research and report this in papers describing study findings.

Topics & Concepts

ChecklistConsolidated Standards of Reporting TrialsMedicineRelevance (law)Clinical trialAlternative medicinePublic involvementGeneral partnershipNursingQuality (philosophy)Medical educationFamily medicinePsychologyPublic relationsPolitical sciencePathologyPhilosophyEpistemologyCognitive psychologyLawMental Health and Patient InvolvementSocial Media in Health EducationPatient-Provider Communication in Healthcare
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