TY - JOUR AU - Crowe, Sally AU - Fenton, Mark AU - Hall, Matthew AU - Cowan, Katherine AU - Chalmers, Iain PY - 2015 DA - 2015/06/25 TI - Patients’, clinicians’ and the research communities’ priorities for treatment research: there is an important mismatch JO - Research Involvement and Engagement SP - 2 VL - 1 IS - 1 AB - There is some evidence that there is a mismatch between what patients and health professionals want to see researched and the research that is actually done. The James Lind Alliance (JLA) research Priority Setting Partnerships (PSPs) were created to address this mismatch. Between 2007 and 2014, JLA partnerships of patients, carers and health professionals agreed on important treatment research questions (priorities) in a range of health conditions, such as Type 1 diabetes, eczema and stroke. We were interested in how much these JLA PSP priorities were similar to treatments undergoing evaluation and research over the same time span. We identified the treatments described in all the JLA PSP research priority lists and compared these to the treatments described in a group of research studies (randomly selected) registered publically. The priorities identified by JLA PSPs emphasised the importance of non-drug treatment research, compared to the research actually being done over the same time period, which mostly involved evaluations of drugs. These findings suggest that the research community should make greater efforts to address issues of importance to users of research, such as patients and healthcare professionals. SN - 2056-7529 UR - https://doi.org/10.1186/s40900-015-0003-x DO - 10.1186/s40900-015-0003-x ID - Crowe2015 ER -