Understanding Barriers and Facilitators to Non-Pharmaceutical Chronic Pain Research Engagement Amongst People Living with Chronic Pain in the UK: A two-phase mixed methods approach.
Objectives: Chronic pain treatment engagement is dominated by pharmaceutical methods, whilst previous research has assessed barriers to uptake of non-pharmaceutical treatments, there has not been research one step earlier in the treatment development pipeline; assessing barriers to taking part in research that develops non-pharmaceutical chronic pain treatment methods. Design: A two-phase approach was used to assess barriers and facilitators to research participation for people living with chronic pain. Online focus groups were run in phase 1, generating qualitative data, whilst phase 2 used the themes identified within phase 1 to assess agreement and disagreement. Setting: Participants consisted of people with chronic pain across the UK. Participants: 36 participants with chronic pain conditions (defined as any pain lasting or recurring for more than 3 months) were recruited for phase 1. 7 participants could not attend their focus group or a subsequent session, leaving a final sample size of 29 participants (83% Female, 17% Male; Age = 20 – 78 years, M 46 = 44.3 years). Phase 2 consisted of 103 participants (89% Female, 10% Male, 1% Prefer not 47 to say; Age = 20 – 80 years, M = 46.6 years). Results: Phase 1 identified the largest barrier to be “Distrust”, relating to a distrust of medical and research professionals, distrust of confidentiality assurances, and distrust that the research would have impact. The greatest facilitator identified was “Improved Accessibility”, which related to the accessibility of the research environment, the type of research being conducted, and accessible advertisement of the research within trusted settings. Phase 2 found around 80% agreement with all facilitator themes and a mix of opinions regarding barrier themes, highlighting the individuality of barriers experienced when living with chronic pain. Conclusions: Addressing the barriers and implementing the facilitators identified here ensures that patient participants are comfortable and safe within research environments. Furthermore, this project provides recommendations for researchers to follow to help increase patient engagement in research studies.
Funding
Pain Relief Foundation Prof John Miles Prize PhD Studentship
BBSRC grant BB/V007580/1
History
School affiliated with
- School of Psychology (Research Outputs)
- School of Psychology, Sport Science and Wellbeing (Research Outputs)
Publication Title
British Medical Journal OpenVolume
14Issue
12Pages/Article Number
e089676Publisher
BMJ Publishing GroupExternal DOI
eISSN
2044-6055Date Submitted
2024-06-05Date Accepted
2024-11-28Date of First Publication
2024-12-22Date of Final Publication
2024-12-22Relevant SDGs
- SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being
Open Access Status
- Open Access