Distinguishing participants, patients and the public: implications of different institutional settings on engagement approaches

Abstract Background There is an established history of patient and public involvement and engagement (PPIE) in academic and clinical research. As the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) expands its investment in research on and by local authorities (LAs), NIHR PPIE frameworks are...

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Main Authors: Anne L. Buffardi, William Lammons, Nira Shah, Dalya Marks
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2025-07-01
Series:Research Involvement and Engagement
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s40900-025-00732-0
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author Anne L. Buffardi
William Lammons
Nira Shah
Dalya Marks
author_facet Anne L. Buffardi
William Lammons
Nira Shah
Dalya Marks
author_sort Anne L. Buffardi
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Background There is an established history of patient and public involvement and engagement (PPIE) in academic and clinical research. As the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) expands its investment in research on and by local authorities (LAs), NIHR PPIE frameworks are increasingly being applied in this new context. This article examines if and how the relationship between the public varies across universities, the NHS and LA and what this means for PPIE. Methods To analyse differences in institutional structures, we reviewed organisational websites, comparing the purpose and responsibilities of the institution, funding sources, governance structures, ability to directly action research findings, the role of public collaborators and duration of this relationship. We then systematically analysed these differences against the six UK Standards for Public Involvement: inclusive opportunities, working together, support and learning, governance, communications and impact. We also held a group discussion with nine PPIE Research Advisory Panel members to sense check if and how they perceived differences across these three institutional contexts and to refine and identify additional hypotheses about what might need to be adapted for PPIE in a LA setting. Results The three institutions generally fall along a continuum, with universities having the most bounded relationship with the public and LAs the most expansive and enduring. The NHS and LAs have statutory responsibilities to the public, who finance their services and whose rights are articulated in institutional constitutions. Reflective of the service delivery responsibilities of both institutions, they are able to directly implement research findings, whereas university research outputs predominantly aim to inform others’ service design and delivery. Given these differences, our analysis suggests that the three standards on working together, governance and PPIE impact may require greater adaptation in LA settings. At the heart of the challenge is role clarification, since public contributors to research may also be council tenants, taxpayers and voters. Conclusions PPIE in LA research offers new opportunities and challenges, requiring tailored guidance that accounts for the unique relationship between LAs and the public. We encourage PPIE contributors, coordinators and scholars across institutional settings to work together to fill this gap.
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spelling doaj-art-abeef8f6ca074ca48bc3710ecb9bf0f42025-08-20T03:46:23ZengBMCResearch Involvement and Engagement2056-75292025-07-0111111310.1186/s40900-025-00732-0Distinguishing participants, patients and the public: implications of different institutional settings on engagement approachesAnne L. Buffardi0William Lammons1Nira Shah2Dalya Marks3London Borough of IslingtonDepartment of Primary Care and Population Health, University College London, Applied Research Collaboration (ARC) North ThamesDepartment of Primary Care and Population Health, University College London, Applied Research Collaboration (ARC) North ThamesLondon Borough of IslingtonAbstract Background There is an established history of patient and public involvement and engagement (PPIE) in academic and clinical research. As the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) expands its investment in research on and by local authorities (LAs), NIHR PPIE frameworks are increasingly being applied in this new context. This article examines if and how the relationship between the public varies across universities, the NHS and LA and what this means for PPIE. Methods To analyse differences in institutional structures, we reviewed organisational websites, comparing the purpose and responsibilities of the institution, funding sources, governance structures, ability to directly action research findings, the role of public collaborators and duration of this relationship. We then systematically analysed these differences against the six UK Standards for Public Involvement: inclusive opportunities, working together, support and learning, governance, communications and impact. We also held a group discussion with nine PPIE Research Advisory Panel members to sense check if and how they perceived differences across these three institutional contexts and to refine and identify additional hypotheses about what might need to be adapted for PPIE in a LA setting. Results The three institutions generally fall along a continuum, with universities having the most bounded relationship with the public and LAs the most expansive and enduring. The NHS and LAs have statutory responsibilities to the public, who finance their services and whose rights are articulated in institutional constitutions. Reflective of the service delivery responsibilities of both institutions, they are able to directly implement research findings, whereas university research outputs predominantly aim to inform others’ service design and delivery. Given these differences, our analysis suggests that the three standards on working together, governance and PPIE impact may require greater adaptation in LA settings. At the heart of the challenge is role clarification, since public contributors to research may also be council tenants, taxpayers and voters. Conclusions PPIE in LA research offers new opportunities and challenges, requiring tailored guidance that accounts for the unique relationship between LAs and the public. We encourage PPIE contributors, coordinators and scholars across institutional settings to work together to fill this gap.https://doi.org/10.1186/s40900-025-00732-0Public involvementEngagementLocal authorityNHSUniversityResident
spellingShingle Anne L. Buffardi
William Lammons
Nira Shah
Dalya Marks
Distinguishing participants, patients and the public: implications of different institutional settings on engagement approaches
Research Involvement and Engagement
Public involvement
Engagement
Local authority
NHS
University
Resident
title Distinguishing participants, patients and the public: implications of different institutional settings on engagement approaches
title_full Distinguishing participants, patients and the public: implications of different institutional settings on engagement approaches
title_fullStr Distinguishing participants, patients and the public: implications of different institutional settings on engagement approaches
title_full_unstemmed Distinguishing participants, patients and the public: implications of different institutional settings on engagement approaches
title_short Distinguishing participants, patients and the public: implications of different institutional settings on engagement approaches
title_sort distinguishing participants patients and the public implications of different institutional settings on engagement approaches
topic Public involvement
Engagement
Local authority
NHS
University
Resident
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s40900-025-00732-0
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AT dalyamarks distinguishingparticipantspatientsandthepublicimplicationsofdifferentinstitutionalsettingsonengagementapproaches