Title: Research and You!
1Research and You!
Mike
- Alicia Sloan, MPH, MSW
- Jim Hunziker, MSN, ARNP
- Michael Donahue, BS
- MS Center of Excellence (MSCoE) West
- VA Puget Sound Health Care System
- Seattle, Washington
- March 8, 2008
Jim
Alicia
2MSCoE - Background
- MS Centers of Excellence (MSCoE) Funded by the
VA in January 2003 to address health needs of
veterans with MS on a national level. - MSCoE-East Baltimore, MD Washington, DC
- MSCoE West Portland, OR Seattle, WA
- MS research is part of the mission of MSCoE,
along with - (1) Clinical Care, (2) Education, and (3)
Informatics. - Who does the research? Interdisciplinary
professionals (several different disciplines) who
want to improve health care for people with MS. - For example physicians, nurses, social workers,
psychologists, occupational therapists, physical
therapists, etc. - Each discipline gives a different perspective to
enrich research.
Presented by Alicia Sloan, slide 2
3MSCoE - Research Focus
- Conduct studies that address special health care
needs of veterans with MS (not typical in the
civilian population of MS) - Much higher proportion of males
- More disabled
- Higher of progressive forms of MS
Presented by Alicia Sloan, slide 3
4MSCoE - Types of Research
- Pre-clinical clinical trials Clinical trial of
a new medication or intervention, or new use or
off-label use of existing medication or
intervention. Often several phases/stages of
research before FDA-approved. - Pilot studies Involves a smaller number of
people. May help decide if it makes sense to do a
larger study in the future. - Multi-site studies Involves more than one VA
site and/or in collaboration with non-VA site. - Health services research Improve quality of
patient services. - Economics research Improve costs of care for MS.
- Secondary data analysis Obtain data from
existing databases to answer a question. - Bottom Line We learn from you and your health
experiences!
Presented by Alicia Sloan, slide 4
5MSCOE Current Research
- National MS Data Repository
- What is it? Began as a MS needs assessment study
that developed into a large database. Links to
other VA databases now. A rich database about
veterans with MS. Researchers apply to obtain
data to answer a question about veterans with MS. - Investigator Studies Exercise, obesity, pain,
pulmonary (lung), kidney stones, spasticity,
tobacco use, immunizations, ER use, VA costs. - Large Study Data Validation of the Repository
Confirming the data in the repository is
accurate. - Bottom Line Data Repository helps us to answer
questions about health problems of veterans
with MS and develop future research and health
interventions to address the problems.
Presented by Alicia Sloan, slide 5
6MSCOE Current Studies
- Specialty Care Examining MS-specific care
appointments cost - Home Telehealth An intervention to improve
access to care and improve quality of care for
veterans with chronic care needs using a home
telehealth monitor. - MS Core Question Set (national home telehealth
program) - DMT Adherence (health behavior change)
- Stroke Robotics Trial May inform future MS
robotics clinical trials for upper extremity
rehab piggy-back studies.
Presented by Alicia Sloan, slide 6
7MSCOE Current Studies (cont.)
- Gulf War study with MSCoEEast Using VA and
other DOD databases. Study is a result of concern
for US veterans deployed to the 1990-1991 Gulf
War (GW) may be at increased risk in developing
neurologic disease. Potentially controversial. - Medical Residents/PhD Students Provider
Attitudes for End of Life Care for MS, Obesity,
Nursing Telehomecare, Medical Ethics, Spasticity,
- Kidney Stones, and ER-use.
Presented by Alicia Sloan, slide 7
8MSCOE Future Studies
- Home Telehealth Exercise health behavior
change to improve fatigue and cognition. - Ginkgo biloba - clinical trial with Portland VA
to improve fatigue and memory.
Presented by Alicia Sloan, slide 8
9MS Research How do I participate?
- You might receive a letter announcing a MS study
- You might see flyers or posters about a study
- You might be approached in MS clinic
- Check VA MSCoE website http//www.va.gov/ms
- Check other MS organizations websites, eg
www.nationalmssociety.org/ - www.mscare.org/cmsc
- www.msaa.com www.msfocus.org
- Check with your local university or college
website
Presented by Alicia Sloan, slide 9
10MSCOE Research Results
- Published in MS Professional journals.
- Published in Patient centered journal articles.
- Published in MSCoE website articles
- http//www.va.gov/ms/
- Presentations at national conferences to share
knowledge with other MS professionals. - Published in VA newsletters, video
teleconferences, telephone conference calls. - Published on websites of MS organizations.
Presented by Alicia Sloan, slide 10
11SO, WHAT IS RESEARCH ALL ABOUT, ANYWAY?
- A way of increasing our understanding of how and
why our bodies behave the way they do!!
Presented by James Hunziker, slide 11
12OVERVIEW
- What Research Is and Isnt
- A Model of Scientific Inquiry
- Different Types of Research
- What Method to Use When
- Applied and Basic Research
Presented by James Hunziker, slide 12
13Why do we do research?
- Most Medical Practice is based on practices that
have always been done (80 or so) - As a result of research, more practice is being
based on methods that we now know are correct - Research is how the Best Practices are
determined
Presented by James Hunziker, slide 13
14An example
- A good example of this is What is the best way
to take a temperature? - There are many choices
- Orally
- Rectally
- Underarm
- Tympanic (ear)
- Forehead
Presented by James Hunziker, slide 14
15Taking a Temperature, continued
- Each method has its drawbacks
- Many treatments are (partially) based on whether
a person has a fever, and if so, how high the
temperature is
Presented by James Hunziker, slide 15
16Taking a Temperature Findings
- Research has shown that
- Tympanic and/or Rectal temperatures are the most
accurate (who wants a thermometer put in their
rectum?) - Oral temperatures are good as long as nothing has
been taken orally for at least 30 minutes - Underarm is not very accurate, but must be used
in some situations - Forehead temperatures work for children as a
screening tool, but are less accurate than
oral/tympanic
Presented by James Hunziker, slide 16
17Another question that has been looked at is
- What is the best way to treat a pressure ulcer?
- Massage?
- Sugar?
- Wet-to-dry dressings?
- Hydrocolloids?
- Dry dressings?
- Research was used to demonstrate what
was best, what should be avoided
Presented by James Hunziker, slide 17
18What are the Research methods?
- A THEORY of why something happens is developed
- This theory helps by
- Organizing the information there is about the
problem/issue/medication - Explains past findings
- Predicts or validates new or current use
Presented by James Hunziker, slide 18
19RESEARCH IS BASED ON THE WORK OF OTHERS
- Past research or findings helps guide new
research - Research does NOT copy the work of others, but
- Expands on what others have done
Presented by James Hunziker, slide 19
20To be valid, Research findings can be repeated by
others
- Repeatability is a sign of credible science
- Replication guides future research
Presented by James Hunziker, slide 20
21RESEARCH IS GENERALIZABLE
- Research should apply to situations outside of
the study setting (i.e. general life/living)
Presented by James Hunziker, slide 21
22RESEARCH IS NOT DONE IN INTELLECTUAL ISOLATION
- For example
- It is done as a result of a question being raised
- It is based on some logical rationale
- It is tied to a theory of why something should be
Presented by James Hunziker, slide 22
23RESEARCH IS DOABLE
- Good research questions can be translated into
projects that can be done!
Presented by James Hunziker, slide 23
24RESEARCH IS ONGOING
- Research generates new questions
- Research is incremental
- A question is asked, then after approval
researched - Based on the answers from the previous study, new
research questions are asked
Presented by James Hunziker, slide 24
25The steps of the research process
Presented by James Hunziker, slide 25
26Steps of the Research process continued.
Presented by James Hunziker, slide 26
27The first item in doing research is to
- Ask or develop the right question to ask,
- Identify a need
- Have a medication or product that needs to be
tested
Presented by James Hunziker, slide 27
28IDENTIFYING IMPORTANT FACTORS
- Not fully investigated
- Advance understanding
- Can be investigated
- Are interesting
- Lead to more questions
Presented by James Hunziker, slide 28
29A HYPOTHESIS IS FORMULATED
- Ifthen statements
- Objective extension of the original question
- In a testable form
Presented by James Hunziker, slide 29
30Decide on Research Method
- There are many research methods that can be used.
Here are some - Experimental, true Experimental, or
Non-experimental Research - Applied vs. Basic research
- Descriptive research
- Historical research
Presented by James Hunziker, slide 30
31Which research method to use is determined by
- Nature of question asked
- Method used to answer question
- Degree of precision of method
Presented by James Hunziker, slide 31
32RELEVANT INFORMATION IS COLLECTED
- Hypotheses posit a relationship between different
factors - Data are collected that will confirm or refute
the hypothesis - Hypotheses are testable (not provable)
Presented by James Hunziker, slide 32
33HYPOTHESIS MUST BE TESTED
- Inferential statistics
- Separate effects of factors from effects of
chance - Assign a probability level to obtained data
Presented by James Hunziker, slide 33
34THE HYPOTHESIS IS WORKED WITH
- If the hypothesis is confirmed
- Plan new research
- If the hypothesis is refuted
- Try to understand what other factors might be
important
Presented by James Hunziker, slide 34
35Depending on what is found, the theory may need
to be reconsidered
- Theories can be modified
- Leading to new questions
Presented by James Hunziker, slide 35
36Participating in ResearchWhat you should know
Presented by Michael Donahue, slide 36
37Participating in Research What you should know
- There are regulations in place to help protect
people who participate in research - Studies are approved by local ethics boards and
agencies such as Food and Drug Administration
(FDA) and the National Institutes of Health (NIH)
Presented by Michael Donahue, slide 37
38Participating in Research What you should know
- These approvals mean they believe the research is
scientifically valid, and - based on the available information, risks are
minimized and worth the potential benefit.
Presented by Michael Donahue, slide 38
39Participating in Research What you should know
- These approvals do not mean
- there arent risks involved
- you will benefit
- the study is right for you
Presented by Michael Donahue, slide 39
40Presented by Michael Donahue, slide 40
41Participating in Research Questions to Ask
- Why is the research being done?
- Why do they think this treatment might be
effective? - What kind of tests will you have?
- What are the risks?
Presented by Michael Donahue, slide 41
42Participating in Research Questions to Ask
(cont.)
- How do the risks compare to the risks of standard
treatments? - How much time is involved (hours, number of
visits, days of the week)? - Will it cost anything?
- How will your privacy be maintained?
Presented by Michael Donahue, slide 42
43Participating in ResearchWhat You Should Know
- You have the right to withdraw at any time.
- Ask questions if you dont understand something!
- Try to read the consent form in advance of the
appointment.
Presented by Michael Donahue, slide 43
44Final Words
- Can you benefit from participating in a
research study? Absolutely! - Are there risks! Yes!
Only you can decide if its right for you!
Presented by Michael Donahue, slide 44
45Presented by Michael Donahue, slide 45
46For more information on research
- www.clinicaltrials.gov
- VAs MSCoE website www.va.gov/ms
- Non-VA MS organizations
- www.nationalmssociety.org/
- www.mscare.org/cmsc
- www.msaa.com
- www.msfocus.org
Presented by Michael Donahue, slide 46