4.2 Article

Youth and family members make meaningful contributions to a randomized-controlled trial: YouthCan IMPACT

Journal

EARLY INTERVENTION IN PSYCHIATRY
Volume 16, Issue 6, Pages 670-677

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/eip.13232

Keywords

engagement; family members; patient-oriented research; randomized-controlled trial; youth

Categories

Funding

  1. Ontario SPOR SUPPORT Unit - Canadian Institutes of Health Research
  2. Province of Ontario
  3. Canadian Institutes of Health Research
  4. Margaret and Wallace McCain Centre for Child, Youth and Family Mental Health, Centre for Addiction and Mental Health (CAMH)

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Youth and family members play substantial roles in complex research projects, including randomized-controlled trials, improving project design, study implementation, associated interventions, and knowledge translation.
Background There are growing calls to engage service users in research about issues relevant to them. Youth and family members can make meaningful contributions to research projects, improving quality and relevance. However, more information is needed on the contributions that youth and family members can make to various study designs. Objective This paper describes the contributions that youth and family members have made to a multi-site pragmatic randomized-controlled trial, YouthCan IMPACT, and the way project-based engagement learnings accelerated change at the institutional level and beyond. Results Youth and family members were full members of the project team, including the project's core governance and working groups. They contributed to project leadership, as funding co-applicants and as equal members of the governance team. They were also engaged in study design. Youth defined the primary outcome measure and contributed to decisions on all secondary measures. The service pathway was co-designed with youth and family members; for example, they guided the inclusion of peer support and a family member intervention as core service components. Study implementation contributions included ensuring a youth- and family-friendly research process and training research staff on working with youth and family members. Knowledge translation activities have included youth and family members as co-presenters and manuscript co-authors. The learnings from this trial have been leveraged to expand youth and family engagement at the institution and beyond. Conclusions Youth and family members make substantial contributions to complex research projects, including randomized-controlled trials, thereby improving project design, study implementation, associated interventions, and knowledge translation.

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