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Int J Geriat Psychiatry - 2022 - Logan - Comparing international dementia research priorities Systematic review.pdf (664.41 kB)

Comparing international dementia research priorities—Systematic review

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journal contribution
posted on 2023-03-08, 14:49 authored by Monica Logan, Stephanie Leitch, Zainab Bosakh, Lucy Beishon, Terence J Quinn

Objectives

Research priority setting aims to collate stakeholder opinion to determine the most pressing research questions. Priority setting exercises influence decisions around research funding, development and policy. We compared published dementia research priority setting exercises from international healthcare systems.


Methods

Four multidisciplinary, international, electronic databases were searched for relevant studies (2010 until 2021). Priorities were extracted, coded and assigned to categories using thematic analysis. The Nine Common Themes of Good Practice (9CTGP) and the Reporting guideline for priority setting of health research (REPRISE) checklists were used to assess methodological and reporting quality respectively.


Results

From 265 titles, 10 priority setting exercises (1179 participants, 147 priorities) were included. Studies spanned four continents and the majority included people living with dementia and their care-givers in the priority setting process (68%). Only one paper met all the best practice indicators. Issues around inclusiveness, implementation and evaluation of the priorities were apparent in nine papers. We categorised priorities under eight themes: caregivers (25%, n = 37), support (24%, n = 35), awareness and education (16%, n = 24), drugs and interventions (14%, n = 21), diagnosis (8%, n = 12), pathology (6%, n = 9), research design (5%, n = 7), and prevention (1%, n = 2). Priorities varied by geographical region, with awareness and education of higher priority in low-middle income countries, compared to caregivers and support in high income countries.


Conclusions

Key priorities were identified with some commonality around themes considered of greatest importance. There is scope to improve the process and reporting of priority setting. Priorities differed according to contextual factors and so, priorities specific to one healthcare setting may not be applicable to others.

Funding

Dunhill Medical Trust. Grant Number: RTF1806\27

History

Author affiliation

Department of Cardiovascular Sciences, University of Leicester

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

International Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry

Volume

37

Issue

12

Publisher

Wiley

issn

0885-6230

eissn

1099-1166

Copyright date

2022

Available date

2023-03-08

Language

en

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