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  3. A National Survey Comparing Patients' and Transplant Professionals' Research Priorities in the Swiss Transplant Cohort Study.
 

A National Survey Comparing Patients' and Transplant Professionals' Research Priorities in the Swiss Transplant Cohort Study.

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BORIS DOI
10.48350/170466
Official URL
https://www.frontierspartnerships.org/articles/10.3389/ti.2022.10255/full
Publisher DOI
10.3389/ti.2022.10255
PubMed ID
35664427
Description
We aimed to identify, assess, compare and map research priorities of patients and professionals in the Swiss Transplant Cohort Study. The project followed 3 steps. 1) Focus group interviews identified patients' (n = 22) research priorities. 2) A nationwide survey assessed and compared the priorities in 292 patients and 175 professionals. 3) Priorities were mapped to the 4 levels of Bronfenbrenner's ecological framework. The 13 research priorities (financial pressure, medication taking, continuity of care, emotional well-being, return to work, trustful relationships, person-centredness, organization of care, exercise and physical fitness, graft functioning, pregnancy, peer contact and public knowledge of transplantation), addressed all framework levels: patient (n = 7), micro (n = 3), meso (n = 2), and macro (n = 1). Comparing each group's top 10 priorities revealed that continuity of care received highest importance rating from both (92.2% patients, 92.5% professionals), with 3 more agreements between the groups. Otherwise, perspectives were more diverse than congruent: Patients emphasized patient level priorities (emotional well-being, graft functioning, return to work), professionals those on the meso level (continuity of care, organization of care). Patients' research priorities highlighted a need to expand research to the micro, meso and macro level. Discrepancies should be recognized to avoid understudying topics that are more important to professionals than to patients.
Date of Publication
2022-05
Publication Type
article
Subject(s)
600 - Technology::610 - Medicine & health
Keyword(s)
organ transplantation patient involvement qualitative methods registry-based study research priorities
Language(s)
en
Contributor(s)
Beckmann, Sonja
Mauthner, Oliver
Schick, Liz
Rochat, Jessica
Lovis, Christian
Boehler, Annette
Binet, Isabelle
Huynh-Do, Uyenorcid-logo
Universitätsklinik für Nephrologie und Hypertonie
De Geest, Sabina
Additional Credits
Universitätsklinik für Nephrologie und Hypertonie
Series
Transplant international
Publisher
Frontiers Media S.A.
ISSN
1432-2277
Access(Rights)
open.access
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