Engagement

Engagement in Research

In PCORI-funded research, patients and other healthcare stakeholders are equitable partners—as opposed to research subjects—who leverage their lived experience and expertise to influence research to be more patient centered, relevant, and useful. Their early and continued involvement throughout a study can lead to greater use and uptake of research results by patients and stakeholders within the healthcare community.

What is Engagement in Research?

The meaningful involvement of patients, caregivers, clinicians, and other healthcare stakeholders throughout the entire research process—from planning the study, to conducting the study, and disseminating study results.

PCORI has underscored the expertise that patient partners provide—the lived experience as a person with an illness or injury or the caregiver or family member of such a person—is incredibly valuable, and contributions of these partners should be recognized accordingly. PCORI has published multiple peer-reviewed articles on the importance and value of patient and stakeholder engagement, which can be found here.

There are a variety of approaches to engaging patient and stakeholder partners in research. Stakeholders can serve on ad hoc working groups to prioritize unanswered research questions or develop dissemination strategies for study results. They can also have more sustained involvement in a study, providing their input and guidance by serving on an advisory committee or a co-investigator. Much like the approaches, there is also variability with respect to level or intensity in which partners are engaged.

Engagement often occurs along a continuum ranging from stakeholder input, to consultation, to collaboration or shared leadership. Stakeholder input is primarily unidirectional, where partners share their perspectives or feedback on a particular topic in a singular forum. Collaboration or shared leadership reflects the bidirectional flow of information, decision-making authority, and leadership on a continued basis.

How Patient and Stakeholder Engagement Leads to More Useful Research Results

Hear about how patient and stakeholder engagement leads to more useful research results, and how PCORI’s efforts have influenced the culture of research.

PCORI's Foundational Expectations for Partnerships in Research

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Foundational Expectations for Partnerships in Research
Explore the Foundational Expectations for Partnerships in Research

PCORI has developed six foundational expectations—building blocks for meaningful, effective, and sustainable engagement with patients, communities, and other partners in research.

The Foundational Expectations for Partnerships in Research updates the 2014 PCORI Engagement Rubric and provides expectations for meaningful engagement to advance patient-centered comparative clinical effectiveness research (CER).

Address these expectations when applying for PCORI funding, developing a project plan and engagement plan for awarded projects, and reflecting on engagement during a project to improve and strengthen engagement over time. Look to specific PCORI funding announcements for further guidance.

Explore the Foundational Expectations

An Engagement Plan: What Is It and Why Is One Important?

Engagement in PCORI-funded studies can take many forms. Effective engagement of patients and stakeholders in research requires a well-thought-out engagement plan. Thus, all applications for PCORI research funding must include an outline of how stakeholder partners will be involved in study preparation, conduct, and the dissemination of findings within its Engagement Plan.

The Engagement Plan within the research application is evaluated throughout the official merit review process to assess the patient-centeredness and engagement elements of the proposed research study. The Engagement Plan portion of an application is the conceptualization of how the research team will be responsive to PCORI's Merit Review Criteria for funding.

Following the receipt of a funding contract, awardees will submit a more robust engagement design using PCORI's Updated Engagement Plan template. As engagement generally varies with the nature of the research, we encourage applicants to propose creative engagement ideas that will meaningfully involve patients and stakeholders with a vested interest in the healthcare topic.

How Can Researchers Engage Patients and Stakeholders in Research?

PCORI's imperative is to require that patients and stakeholders be involved in the health research process, which is what we refer to as research engagement. While it sounds easy in theory, practicing engagement, while upholding the rigor of scientific inquiry, requires considerable planning and thoughtfulness.

Engagement in Research: Not One-Size-Fits-All

Just as there is no one-size-fits-all study design, there’s also no one-size-fits-all approach to research engagement. Engagement approaches and practices can—and should—vary with condition, geography, the target population, and other factors, such as the type of healthcare setting, or even the social ecosystem.

Understanding these contextual indicators is crucial to devising an effective engagement strategy in a PCORI-funded research study. Engagement is how this understanding gets generated and incorporated into the study and beyond.

As more researchers are conducting PCOR/CER, we are also learning about various approaches and working to synthesize the lessons learned to help researchers step into, and succeed, with engaging patients and stakeholders in their work.

Often the biggest challenge to engagement is a lack of clarity about what it is and how to put it into practice. The best place to start is with why, meaning, why are you seeking the voices of patients and stakeholders? If the answer is to help increase the usefulness, usability and accessibility of your study’s findings, then you can start answering the other important questions concerning who, what, and how?

  • Who are the best people to push my team beyond our current thinking? Who can provide valuable insights or different perspectives that enhance our research questions, design, or recruitment plan? Who are the players who can help me get the findings into the hands of the people who can use them?
  • What does my research team need to do to establish and foster these relationships? What needs to occur to align the right people with the study, in a manner that will keep them involved and energized?
  • How do we organize the engagement activities so that these are beneficial and manageable within the constraints of cost, time, and individual capacity?

PCORI has developed resources for researchers that can help research teams answer these critical engagement questions.

Where Is the "Science of Engagement" Headed?

PCORI launched the Science of Engagement Initiative in July 2022. This funding opportunity was authorized for three years (nine funding cycles) by PCORI's Board of Governors and aims to fund studies that address high-priority gaps in the science of engagement in research focused on:

  • Rapid development or assessment of validity of measures to capture structure and context, process, and outcomes of engagement, both for stakeholders and investigators.
  • Development or testing of engagement methods to generate evidence on the most effective engagement approaches, particularly for underrepresented populations, and how effectiveness varies by context.

To learn more about PCORI's priorities in measures of engagement, please see our article on Measuring What Matters for Advancing the Science and Practice of Engagement.

We’d like to hear your reflections, feedback, or input about how we advance measuring engagement in research at [email protected].


Posted: October 30, 2018; Updated: February 26, 2024

What's Happening at PCORI?

The Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute sends weekly emails about opportunities to apply for funding, newly funded research studies and engagement projects, results of our funded research, webinars, and other new information posted on our site.

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