Help Everyone SHARE

Friday, August 7, 2015

Everyday People Powering Research


Last week, I was at a meeting on how to determine the value of healthcare (a difficult topic) and heard a comment that the group’s deliverables should not be simply “patient-centered” but instead should be “patient-driven.”  This statement perfectly echoes the changing world of patient advocacy and patient engagement.  More emphasis is being placed on patients and their experiences and many people are looking at how to bring about this change in healthcare as well as bringing the patient into science and research.

In 2010, the Patient Centered Outcomes Research Institute (PCORI) was formed and started giving out large research grants--but only if you have a patient-centered project and team.  Since then, I have seen researchers pay a lot more attention to incorporating not only patient advocacy organizations but the patients themselves into designing and carrying out studies.  Increasingly, patients are being asked to comment both on specific research studies and on broader policy issues.  This trend towards patient engagement has become so sweeping that a new program called “The Science of Patient Input” was just announced in June by Faster Cures, an action tank determined to remove barriers to medical progress.  The concept of incorporating patients into research is here, and it’s here to stay.

But there’s still something missing.  Educated patients are moving the needle forward towards making the system patient-centric by giving feedback about their experiences and providing input on clinical trials, research studies, and proposed law-making.  But what about the rest of us?  What about me? Thankfully, I’m actually pretty healthy.  So what can I do? Or my brother, who’s in finance and doesn’t know anything about medicine, how can he drive research?

This is where SHARE For Cures comes in.  SHARE For Cures wants to change “patient-driven” to “people-driven.”  Anyone, everyone,  everyday people.  We want everyone to be able to choose to share their health data to move medical research forward.  Clinical trials tend to be on a small group of individuals that meet specific eligibility criteria; however, many researchers and drug developers are interested in effects on “real-world” people.  We are the real world people.  Whether sick or healthy, our health and wellness data can make a difference.    Check us out, follow us, and sign up to be an early adopter.  Learn how you can help power research.