The aim is to enable more patients to be involved in mental health research and ultimately to improve health outcomes.
What is the health problem?
Evidence shows that people who receive care in research-active clinical settings experience better health outcomes. Relatively speaking, research is embraced in physical health settings, with research in specialist services, such as oncology seen as a mark of quality. However, involvement in research in mental health settings, has been more challenging.
Serving a local population of 1.3 million people, South London and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust (SLaM) is committed to addressing this. As part of its research strategy, the Trust aims to routinely offer patients opportunities to take part in research, alongside their clinical care, to help improve service user outcomes.
At the moment it is difficult for SLaM clinicians to access a ‘menu’ of suitable research studies at a patient’s appointment. In addition, clinical teams are busy and have limited time to engage with service users around research, and so valuable opportunities for participation in research may be missed. Currently, researchers rely on asking clinical staff to identify and link them to potential participants, which has limitations.
Aim of the project
The ARC research team, led by Professor Fiona Gaughran, aim to change this, using electronic prompts generated by CogStack, an information retrieval platform developed by NIHR Maudsley Biomedical Research Centre, to alert SLaM mental health clinicians of research studies relevant to their patients. The aim is to increase access to clinical research.