Public Involvement in Cancer Research: Collaborative Evaluation Using Photovoice

Abstract BackgroundA public involvement group consisting of 4 public contributors with lived experience of cancer diagnosis contributed to 2 cancer research projects that focused on optimizing the diagnostic pathways for patients with suspected cancer. The public contributors...

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Main Authors: Piotr Teodorowski, Melanie McInnes, Glen Dale, Linda Galbraith, Esme Radin, Karen Gold, Erica Gadsby
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: JMIR Publications 2025-07-01
Series:JMIR Cancer
Online Access:https://cancer.jmir.org/2025/1/e75741
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author Piotr Teodorowski
Melanie McInnes
Glen Dale
Linda Galbraith
Esme Radin
Karen Gold
Erica Gadsby
author_facet Piotr Teodorowski
Melanie McInnes
Glen Dale
Linda Galbraith
Esme Radin
Karen Gold
Erica Gadsby
author_sort Piotr Teodorowski
collection DOAJ
description Abstract BackgroundA public involvement group consisting of 4 public contributors with lived experience of cancer diagnosis contributed to 2 cancer research projects that focused on optimizing the diagnostic pathways for patients with suspected cancer. The public contributors have been involved from the start of the projects and were involved in aspects of the design, analysis, and dissemination alongside research and clinical teams. Despite public involvement in cancer research being seen as a key element of the research process, there is still a limited understanding of what works well and how to do it in a meaningful way for both researchers and public contributors. ObjectiveThis study aims to evaluate the public involvement process in 2 cancer research projects. MethodsThis was a collaborative evaluation with the research team and public contributors jointly evaluating the process. Data were collected throughout the lifespan of the project by public contributors through photovoice, where they collected photos that represented their experiences of involvement. At the end of the evaluation meeting, 2 separate analyses were conducted. First, public contributors reflected on their experiences using a 4-dimensional framework to capture how strong their voice was, how many ways they had an opportunity to be involved, if their feedback was implemented, and if the discussion focused on their priorities. Second, they analyzed the collected photos by organizing them alongside their narratives, explaining their meanings and comparing how they experienced the involvement process. ResultsNarratives from 8 photos illustrate public contributors’ experience of involvement in these projects, presenting them in chronological order, showing how their perspectives evolved from not knowing what form the project would take, through understanding foundations and building confidence through being satisfied with the successful projects. Results from the 4-dimensional framework showed that public contributors felt that their voices were strong, and the research and clinical team mostly implemented suggested changes. The discussion focused on topics and issues that were relevant to public contributors. However, how public contributors were involved depended mainly on the research team’s decision, and they would have preferred more opportunities. ConclusionsThis study has shown that public contributors can be meaningfully involved throughout the lifespan of cancer research projects. The evaluation demonstrated that establishing a strong relationship and trust between researchers and public contributors helps to ensure that the public contributors’ voice is meaningful and makes a difference in the projects. However, it also identified improvements for future public involvement. Researchers should involve public contributors as early as the funding application stage to offer more opportunities to shape research and thus have diverse involvement opportunities at each stage of the research process.
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spelling doaj-art-1c83cf428fc14fa9be33a8bbd2504e2f2025-08-20T03:38:39ZengJMIR PublicationsJMIR Cancer2369-19992025-07-0111e75741e7574110.2196/75741Public Involvement in Cancer Research: Collaborative Evaluation Using PhotovoicePiotr Teodorowskihttp://orcid.org/0000-0003-2172-8298Melanie McInneshttp://orcid.org/0009-0005-0651-3397Glen Dalehttp://orcid.org/0009-0000-0007-186XLinda Galbraithhttp://orcid.org/0009-0005-6667-6091Esme Radinhttp://orcid.org/0009-0001-9727-4483Karen Goldhttp://orcid.org/0009-0009-2680-4633Erica Gadsbyhttp://orcid.org/0000-0002-4151-5911 Abstract BackgroundA public involvement group consisting of 4 public contributors with lived experience of cancer diagnosis contributed to 2 cancer research projects that focused on optimizing the diagnostic pathways for patients with suspected cancer. The public contributors have been involved from the start of the projects and were involved in aspects of the design, analysis, and dissemination alongside research and clinical teams. Despite public involvement in cancer research being seen as a key element of the research process, there is still a limited understanding of what works well and how to do it in a meaningful way for both researchers and public contributors. ObjectiveThis study aims to evaluate the public involvement process in 2 cancer research projects. MethodsThis was a collaborative evaluation with the research team and public contributors jointly evaluating the process. Data were collected throughout the lifespan of the project by public contributors through photovoice, where they collected photos that represented their experiences of involvement. At the end of the evaluation meeting, 2 separate analyses were conducted. First, public contributors reflected on their experiences using a 4-dimensional framework to capture how strong their voice was, how many ways they had an opportunity to be involved, if their feedback was implemented, and if the discussion focused on their priorities. Second, they analyzed the collected photos by organizing them alongside their narratives, explaining their meanings and comparing how they experienced the involvement process. ResultsNarratives from 8 photos illustrate public contributors’ experience of involvement in these projects, presenting them in chronological order, showing how their perspectives evolved from not knowing what form the project would take, through understanding foundations and building confidence through being satisfied with the successful projects. Results from the 4-dimensional framework showed that public contributors felt that their voices were strong, and the research and clinical team mostly implemented suggested changes. The discussion focused on topics and issues that were relevant to public contributors. However, how public contributors were involved depended mainly on the research team’s decision, and they would have preferred more opportunities. ConclusionsThis study has shown that public contributors can be meaningfully involved throughout the lifespan of cancer research projects. The evaluation demonstrated that establishing a strong relationship and trust between researchers and public contributors helps to ensure that the public contributors’ voice is meaningful and makes a difference in the projects. However, it also identified improvements for future public involvement. Researchers should involve public contributors as early as the funding application stage to offer more opportunities to shape research and thus have diverse involvement opportunities at each stage of the research process.https://cancer.jmir.org/2025/1/e75741
spellingShingle Piotr Teodorowski
Melanie McInnes
Glen Dale
Linda Galbraith
Esme Radin
Karen Gold
Erica Gadsby
Public Involvement in Cancer Research: Collaborative Evaluation Using Photovoice
JMIR Cancer
title Public Involvement in Cancer Research: Collaborative Evaluation Using Photovoice
title_full Public Involvement in Cancer Research: Collaborative Evaluation Using Photovoice
title_fullStr Public Involvement in Cancer Research: Collaborative Evaluation Using Photovoice
title_full_unstemmed Public Involvement in Cancer Research: Collaborative Evaluation Using Photovoice
title_short Public Involvement in Cancer Research: Collaborative Evaluation Using Photovoice
title_sort public involvement in cancer research collaborative evaluation using photovoice
url https://cancer.jmir.org/2025/1/e75741
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AT lindagalbraith publicinvolvementincancerresearchcollaborativeevaluationusingphotovoice
AT esmeradin publicinvolvementincancerresearchcollaborativeevaluationusingphotovoice
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