Research co-design in health: a rapid overview of reviews
Sustainable Development Institute · Monash University
Abstract
Billions of dollars are lost annually in health research that fails to create meaningful benefits for patients. Engaging in research co-design - the meaningful involvement of end-users in research - may help address this research waste. This rapid overview of reviews addressed three related questions, namely (1) what approaches to research co-design exist in health settings? (2) What activities do these research co-design approaches involve? (3) What do we know about the effectiveness of existing research co-design approaches? The review focused on the study planning phase of research, defined as the point up to which the research question and study design are finalised.
Reviews of research co-design were systematically identified using a rapid overview of reviews approach (PROSPERO: CRD42019123034). The search strategy encompassed three academic databases, three grey literature databases, and a hand-search of the journal Research Involvement and Engagement. Two reviewers independently conducted the screening and data extraction and resolved disagreements through discussion. Disputes were resolved through discussion with a senior author (PB). One reviewer performed quality assessment. The results were narratively synthesised.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 128.63
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 54
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Research design
- Health services research
- Scope (computer science)
- Grey literature
- Clinical study design
- Data extraction
- Inclusion (mineral)
- Systematic review