TY - BOOK AU - Graham,Ian D. AU - Rycroft-Malone,Jo AU - Kothari,Anita AU - McCutcheon,Chris TI - Research co-production in healthcare SN - 9781119757238 AV - R852 U1 - 610.72/4 23/eng/20220510 PY - 2022/// CY - Chichester, West Sussex, UK, Hoboken PB - Wiley-Blackwell KW - Biomedical Research KW - methods KW - Research Design KW - Intersectoral Collaboration KW - Electronic books N1 - ABOUT THE AUTHOR Ian D. Graham, PhD, FCAHS, FNYAM, FRSC, is Distinguished University Professor at the Schools of Epidemiology and Public Health & Nursing at the University of Ottawa and a Senior Scientist at the Ottawa Hospital Research Institute in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada. Jo Rycroft-Malone, PhD, is Distinguished Professor and Executive Dean of the Faculty of Health and Medicine at Lancaster University in Lancaster, England. Anita Kothari, PhD, is Professor at the School of Health Studies at the University of Western Ontario in London, Ontario, Canada. Chris McCutcheon, PhD(c), is Research Programme Manager at the Ottawa Hospital Research Institute in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada; Includes bibliographical references and index; TABLE OF CONTENTS oreword xv About the Chapter Authors xvii Editors xxiii Acknowledgements xxv About the Companion Website xxvii Chapter 1 Introduction 1 Authors: Anita Kothari, Jo Rycroft-Malone, Chris McCutcheon, and Ian D. Graham Background: What Is This Book About? 1 Focus of the Chapter: What Do We Mean by Research Coproduction? 4 Known from the Literature: Intellectual Origins and Historical Traditions 6 Scope of the Book 9 References 11 Chapter 2 Foundations of Research Coproduction 14 Chapter 2.1. Conceptualizing and Theorizing for Research Coproduction 14 Authors: Anne MacFarlane and Jonathan Salsberg Chapter 2.2. Equity, Power, and Transformative Research Coproduction 34 Authors: Katrina Plamondon, Sume Ndumbe-Eyoh, and Sana Shahram Chapter 2.3. Effects, Facilitators, and Barriers of Research Coproduction Reported in Peer-Reviewed Literature 54 Authors: Katheryn M. Sibley, Femke Hoekstra, Anita Kothari, and Kelly Mrklas Chapter 3 Working with Knowledge Users 74 Chapter 3.1 Working with Knowledge Users 74 Authors: Jo Cooke, Susan Mawson, and Susan Hampshaw Chapter 3.2 Research Coproduction with Patients and Caregivers 91 Authors: Claire Ludwig and Davina Banner Chapter 3.3 Conducting a Research Coproduction Project: A Principles-Based Approach 112 Authors: Joe Langley, Sarah E. Knowles, and Vicky Ward Chapter 3.4 The View from Within: Organizational Strategies for Effective Research Partnerships 129Authors: Sarah Bowen, Ian D. Graham, and Ingrid Botting Authors: Sarah Bowen, Ian D. Graham,and Ingrid Botting Chapter 3.5 Managing Academic-Health Service Partnerships 151 Authors: Alison M. Hutchinson, Cheyne Chalmers, Katrina Nankervis, and Nicole (Nikki) Phillips Chapter 4 Grant-Writing, Dissemination, and Evaluation 169 Chapter 4.1 Writing a Research Coproduction Grant Proposal 169 Authors: Ian D. Graham, Chris McCutcheon, Jo Rycroft-Malone, and Anita Kothari Appendix 4.1.A. CIHR advice on knowledgeuser letters of support – a quick reference 189 Appendix 4.1.B. Applicant and reviewer coproduction research proposal checklist 190 Chapter 4.2 Coproduced Dissemination 192 Authors: Chris McCutcheon, Anita Kothari, Ian D. Graham, and Jo Rycroft-Malone Chapter 4.3 Evaluating Coproduction Research: Research Quality Plus for Coproduction (RQ+ 4 Co-Pro) 210 Authors: Robert K.D. McLean, Ian D. Graham, and Fred Carden Chapter 5 Capacity-Building and Infrastructure 233 Chapter 5.1 Researcher Coproduction Competencies and Incentives 233 Authors: Christopher R. Burton and Tone Elin Mekki Chapter 5.2 Trainees and Research Coproduction 249 Authors: Christine Cassidy, Emily Ramage, Sandy Steinwender, and Shauna Best Chapter 5.3 The Role of Funders 271 Authors: Bev Holmes and Chonnettia Jones Chapter 6 Building Blocks for Research Coproduction: Reflections and Implications 290 Authors: Jo Rycroft-Malone, Ian D. Graham, Anita Kothari, and Chris McCutcheon Index 303 N2 - "Research coproduction is an approach to health research that involves working collaboratively with knowledge-users as partners in the research process. It allows multiple perspectives to influence the research question and approach so that it better reflects the needs of those using the knowledge in practice. Decision-making is shared by researchers and knowledge-users throughout the research process. By linking knowledge and practice at the research stage, bilateral or multilateral exchange of expertise leads to more relevant, feasible, and used research findings, and improved dissemination and impact via networks created with the knowledge-users. This introductory chapter defines research coproduction, inclusive of divergent conceptualizations of how stakeholders and knowledge-users are defined and engaged and explores similar collaborative research approaches that have informed the way coproduction is approached and understood. The potential benefits, relevance, and conduct of research coproduction are introduced and sets an initial understanding to explore the various foundations, applications, and processes in the following chapters of this book"-- UR - https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/book/10.1002/9781119757269 ER -