10 min

S2E6.5 - onePERspective As PER Usual

    • Medicine

In this feature segment of asPERusual, guest listener and patient partner Kathy Smith offers a short recap and her key takeaways from last week's episode of asPERusual focused on SPOR Diabetes Action Canada. Tune in to this short (~10 minute) episode, regardless of whether you want to compare reflections or get the Coles notes of the full Diabetes Action Canada episode.
Episode Transcript:
Anna:
Hi everyone! Welcome back to onePERspective. A tri-weekly segment in which patient partner Kathy Smith shares a synopsis and key reflections from the previous week’s episode of asPERusual – a podcast for practical patient engagement. Today, Kathy will be recapping the episode in which Tracy McQuire and Linxi Mytkolli came to talk about the Strategy for Patient-Oriented Research Diabetes Action Canada, or DAC as its known for short. In case you haven’t listened to that episode, Diabetes Action Canada is a network of patients, care partners and researchers that work together to identify the health concerns of those living with diabetes and co-create research projects to address them. It is funded by the Strategy for Patient-Oriented Research, also known as SPOR for short, which is a national coalition that was created by Canada’s major public funder of health research to champion and support patient-oriented research. Alright — take it away Kathy with your onePERspective.
Kathy Smith:
Building equitable relationships is the cornerstone of an engagement strategy. Never underestimate the time it takes to build trust, transparency; understand and address/accept the inevitable power imbalances. Over communicate. Over explain. That was one of the many strong messages shared by Tracy McGuire and Linxi Mytkolli of Diabetes Action Canada. And how many times have we heard that very same message from our other engagement platform podcasters? Relationship building takes a patience of time to do it right. Once everyone gets on board and speaks the same language, you can proceed full steam ahead!
Something remarkable and perhaps unique is that DAC has a dedicated patient engagement navigator/manager on staff. What a thrill to hear Linxi and Tracy single out this dedicated manager position as an absolute “must” to set everyone up for success with patient partnering in research. The Navigator is a “niche role” that can’t be filled by just anyone. It requires someone laser focused, experienced, and well-educated in team building. This dynamic multi-tasker must train, upskill, mentor, facilitate and co-ordinate events. The Navigator communicates with each group individually and collectively. That’s a lot of work and a lot of hats to wear! And Linxi wears yet another hat to balance the wants and needs of her four “L” partner groups:
the Lived — the people who have had the healthcare experience;
the Loved — the care partners for the patient;
the Learned — the academics;
the Labourers — your clinicians and co-ordinators.
While the 4 “L”s contribute uniquely important lived experiences and expertise, each speaks with their own jargon. So, like and orchestra conductor, the navigator must blend these lexicons into a common language. “Re-calculating” as Siri tells us - aligning to collaborate, to set the goals and logistics of a co-designed study.
I was thrilled to hear Tracy describe how DAC is now gathering patient ideas for research studies and then helping patients put their ideas into research proposals as lead researchers. For patients by patients – that’s quite a mindful, patient-facing innovation. Standardized screening for diabetic retinopathy led by Dr. Valeria Rac was one such study completely driven by patient partners!
DAC stands out for its depth and breadth of patient partnership opportunities anywhere along the study continuum and for all the training partnerships that they have established as well. It’s nice to see DAC’s emphasis on evaluation. That to me addresses a big need in patien

In this feature segment of asPERusual, guest listener and patient partner Kathy Smith offers a short recap and her key takeaways from last week's episode of asPERusual focused on SPOR Diabetes Action Canada. Tune in to this short (~10 minute) episode, regardless of whether you want to compare reflections or get the Coles notes of the full Diabetes Action Canada episode.
Episode Transcript:
Anna:
Hi everyone! Welcome back to onePERspective. A tri-weekly segment in which patient partner Kathy Smith shares a synopsis and key reflections from the previous week’s episode of asPERusual – a podcast for practical patient engagement. Today, Kathy will be recapping the episode in which Tracy McQuire and Linxi Mytkolli came to talk about the Strategy for Patient-Oriented Research Diabetes Action Canada, or DAC as its known for short. In case you haven’t listened to that episode, Diabetes Action Canada is a network of patients, care partners and researchers that work together to identify the health concerns of those living with diabetes and co-create research projects to address them. It is funded by the Strategy for Patient-Oriented Research, also known as SPOR for short, which is a national coalition that was created by Canada’s major public funder of health research to champion and support patient-oriented research. Alright — take it away Kathy with your onePERspective.
Kathy Smith:
Building equitable relationships is the cornerstone of an engagement strategy. Never underestimate the time it takes to build trust, transparency; understand and address/accept the inevitable power imbalances. Over communicate. Over explain. That was one of the many strong messages shared by Tracy McGuire and Linxi Mytkolli of Diabetes Action Canada. And how many times have we heard that very same message from our other engagement platform podcasters? Relationship building takes a patience of time to do it right. Once everyone gets on board and speaks the same language, you can proceed full steam ahead!
Something remarkable and perhaps unique is that DAC has a dedicated patient engagement navigator/manager on staff. What a thrill to hear Linxi and Tracy single out this dedicated manager position as an absolute “must” to set everyone up for success with patient partnering in research. The Navigator is a “niche role” that can’t be filled by just anyone. It requires someone laser focused, experienced, and well-educated in team building. This dynamic multi-tasker must train, upskill, mentor, facilitate and co-ordinate events. The Navigator communicates with each group individually and collectively. That’s a lot of work and a lot of hats to wear! And Linxi wears yet another hat to balance the wants and needs of her four “L” partner groups:
the Lived — the people who have had the healthcare experience;
the Loved — the care partners for the patient;
the Learned — the academics;
the Labourers — your clinicians and co-ordinators.
While the 4 “L”s contribute uniquely important lived experiences and expertise, each speaks with their own jargon. So, like and orchestra conductor, the navigator must blend these lexicons into a common language. “Re-calculating” as Siri tells us - aligning to collaborate, to set the goals and logistics of a co-designed study.
I was thrilled to hear Tracy describe how DAC is now gathering patient ideas for research studies and then helping patients put their ideas into research proposals as lead researchers. For patients by patients – that’s quite a mindful, patient-facing innovation. Standardized screening for diabetic retinopathy led by Dr. Valeria Rac was one such study completely driven by patient partners!
DAC stands out for its depth and breadth of patient partnership opportunities anywhere along the study continuum and for all the training partnerships that they have established as well. It’s nice to see DAC’s emphasis on evaluation. That to me addresses a big need in patien

10 min