{"id":347,"date":"2009-10-21T01:37:58","date_gmt":"2009-10-21T01:37:58","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/jpm.redhorsedev.com\/?p=347"},"modified":"2023-02-20T11:04:31","modified_gmt":"2023-02-20T16:04:31","slug":"building-a-research-agenda-for-participatory-medicine","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/participatorymedicine.org\/journal\/evidence\/reviews\/2009\/10\/21\/building-a-research-agenda-for-participatory-medicine\/","title":{"rendered":"Building a Research Agenda for Participatory Medicine"},"content":{"rendered":"
Summary:<\/em><\/strong> The emerging phenomenon of participatory medicine seems to lead to improved health outcomes, but this is not yet supported by a robust evidence base. Fundamental questions about the participation of individuals\u2014sick and well\u2014remain unanswered. Only through the convergence of many diverse and novel modes of research can the richness and complexity of participatory medicine be made workable. We provide here some issues for consideration in the development of such a research agenda for participatory medicine, reflecting our personal interests as physicians. Patients, allied health professionals, researchers, and others will generate questions consistent with their own perspectives that will enlarge and enrich the agenda. This is a field in its infancy that, by definition\u2014and according to the values that drive it\u2014should be developed as a collaborative effort by all stakeholders, charting the course for the journal and the research it publishes.<\/p>\n Keywords:<\/em><\/strong> Participatory medicine, HIT, research framework, research methodologies.<\/p>\n Citation:<\/em><\/strong> Kvedar JC, Kibbe DC. Building a research agenda for participatory medicine. J Participat Med. 2009;1(1):e16.<\/p>\n Published:<\/em><\/strong> October 19, 2009.<\/p>\n Competing Interests:<\/em><\/strong> The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.<\/p>\n Why a journal devoted to participatory medicine? For millennia, medicine has been viewed as a professional service during which the recipient sought the knowledge of the expert without question. A confluence of factors is changing that, including an overburdened health care system and inexpensive, fast consumer access to targeted information, technologies, and peer support. And while many of us have a strong hunch that the emerging phenomenon of participatory medicine leads to improved health outcomes, this is not yet supported by a robust evidence base. Although the past decade has invited scientific scrutiny of the role of individual behavior in health promotion, disease prevention, and chronic disease management, fundamental questions about the participation of individuals\u2014sick and well\u2014remain unanswered.<\/p>\n Thus, the task at hand is to understand the value of individuals’ active, informed involvement in their health and health care, and what it will take to ensure that they are able to act on their own behalf. We believe that the answers will come from interdisciplinary research that calls on the knowledge and skills of patients, clinicians, behavioral and social scientists, and health services researchers. And this research must take the form of randomized controlled trials, quasi-experimental designs, surveys, observational studies, case studies, and narratives. Only through the convergence of these diverse modes of research can the richness and complexity of participatory medicine be made workable.<\/p>\n We were pleased to be asked to raise some issues for consideration in the development of a research agenda for participatory medicine. We recognize that the agenda described here is tilted toward questions that reflect our personal interests as physicians. Patients, allied health professionals, researchers, and others will of course generate questions consistent with their own perspectives that will enlarge and enrich the agenda. This is a field in its infancy that, by definition\u2014and according to the values that drive it\u2014should be developed as a collaborative effort by all stakeholders, charting the course for the journal and the research it publishes.<\/p>\n