Vanessa

Vanessa manages the charity and is responsible for delivering their vision for transforming mental health research by championing the role of experts by experience. Vanessa has been involving patients and members of the public in her research for about 15 years.

Vanessa was an academic mental health services researcher before starting a mental health research charity with her husband called the McPin Foundation. Her interest in mental health stems from experiences at University as an under graduate and in her family, inspiring her to undertake a PhD with mental health service users and progress a career in both university research and within the mental health charity sector. Her charity aims to promote and advise on how to effectively involve patients and the public in research. They deliver research and evaluation projects, help others to deliver quality research studies and work in partnership to influence the mental health research sector.

The McPin Foundation involves people who have lived experience of mental health problems either, service users or their carers/family members, in all their work, from thinking of research questions, reviewing study ideas and protocols, collecting and analysing data, and writing up the findings. The service users are often employed as peer researchers and Vanessa explained that it was important that they aren’t treated differently or highlighted as being different from researchers who aren’t service users. It is also important to her that they are paid, so she ensures she keeps up to date with and seeks advice from experts on how to involve people who are on benefits. She also said it is important that anyone who gets involved is informed about the possible implications for their benefits.

Vanessa believes peer researchers have a big impact on research. She said when they interview people who have a shared experience she has seen what she described as the subtle’ and very, very explicit’ ways in which it makes a difference. She said it was important to try and capture these and in their next large scale programme of research, they are going to keep a record of how project partners feel peer researchers and service users have made a difference.

Involving service users in research can have emotional consequences. Vanessa explained that it causes her to worry because there might be serious personal consequences for individuals if getting involved contributes to a mental health crisis. She also said that they’re asking people to share their personal experiences in research, which can be difficult and requires careful consideration and support.

Vanessa said that patient and public involvement is at an important point in its development, and that she feels it has a lot more potential. She would like to see more networks being developed so that everyone can share information and experiences about involvement and she said that the McPin Foundation was keen to work with others in this way.

We have made great strides with involvement but the case is still being made. There is a role for NIHR to bring greater coordination, leadership and sharing of expertise.

Age at interview 42

Gender Female

Vanessa would like clearer feedback from funding reviewers on how far the level of PPI in an application affected the eventual funding decision.

Age at interview 42

Gender Female

It’s important to give user researchers careful supervision and support, but Vanessa feels she has learnt a lot about research from working with them.

Age at interview 42

Gender Female

Vanessa would like to see more national leadership, networking and shared learning. Too often involvement is delegated to junior people with little support or job security.

Age at interview 42

Gender Female

Vanessa wonders whether we can use less jargon and move the academics towards the lay’ as well as helping lay people understand academics.

Age at interview 42

Gender Female

Vanessa describes a study which showed data collected by a mental health user researcher was no different to data collected by other researchers.

Age at interview 42

Gender Female

Researchers and healthcare professionals need training and mentorship in involvement from the earliest stages of their career.

Age at interview 42

Gender Female

Involvement is more than engagement. Vanessa is working to convince sceptics it makes a real difference to research, and isn’t just about human rights.

Age at interview 42

Gender Female

For Vanessa, the benefit for individuals who get involved is as important as their impact on research quality.

Age at interview 42

Gender Female

Some users involved in Vanessa’s mental health studies want to be seen as just researchers’ and not service user researchers.

Age at interview 42

Gender Female

Involving users when reflecting on the data analysis helped give different perspectives.

Age at interview 42

Gender Female

Vanessa used one-to-one discussions with users to gather their views on a topic they might have felt uncomfortable talking about in a group.

Age at interview 42

Gender Female

Vanessa argues that people with experience of mental health problems bring a valuable form of expertise to research.

Age at interview 42

Gender Female