Translate MedTech – Patient and Public Involvement and Engagement
Date and time
Location
Online event
This course aims to increase knowledge about how to involve patients, the public and carers in the development/delivery of medtech research
About this event
Translate MedTech – Patient and Public Involvement and Engagement
This training course, delivered online over 3 hours, aims to increase knowledge about how to involve patients, the public and carers in the development and delivery of medtech research. The session will use hands on activities and examine real life case studies of effective PPIE methods.
Open to academics, researchers, clinicians and industry representatives, by attending the course you will:
Agenda
- What Patient and Public Involvement/Engagement (PPIE) is in the context of medtech research
- The benefits of PPIE from both a researcher and patient perspective
- Different types of PPIE methods throughout the research cycle and how they look in practice
- Considerations when developing your own PPIE plans
The training course will be run by Amy Rebane, PPIE Manager, and PPIE members from the NIHR Leeds Biomedical Research Centre.
Spaces are limited and registration is essential.
This course will be delivered by the trainer remotely via video conferencing software. Information about how to join the conferencing call will be emailed to everyone that has registered.
Free to staff and postgraduate research students at Translate partner universities (Bradford, Huddersfield, Leeds, Leeds Beckett, Sheffield Hallam and York).
Places for industry and clinical representatives are available at a cost of £45, please email Mohua Siddique (M.Siddique@leeds.ac.uk) to secure your ticket.
About the trainer
Amy Rebane is the Patient and Public Involvement/Engagement (PPIE) Manager for the NIHR Leeds Biomedical Research Centre (BRC), she also supports PPIE across the NIHR@Leeds partnership. Amy’s role focuses on supporting researchers to carry-out PPIE in their research and research development, ensuring that best practice is met and patient benefit is clearly defined. Prior to working at the BRC, Amy worked in a voluntary sector user-led organisation with a commitment to the Social Model of Disability for ten years. PPI in this sense focused on the evaluation and improvement of health and social care services to ensure patient need was met. It also included a social research element, looking into the specific needs of often under-represented patient groups, and ensuring their first-hand experiences were heard in the implementation and improvement of health and social care services.
The registration process is being managed through Eventbrite, a third-party platform that provides a comprehensive event experience for you and us. This means you are providing data to Eventbrite and must agree to their privacy policy terms, and we will also use your data as per our own privacy policy. If you have any questions get in touch via hello@translate-medtech.ac.uk