The MBCRC Advocate Researcher Program (MARP): connecting advocates and researchers as collaborative partners in cancer research
Hillary S. Andrews, Igor L. Bado, Amy Beumer, Isaac S. Chan, Janice Cowden, Debbie Denardi, Gloria V. Echeverria, Brooke L. Gates, Marybeth Gilliam, Christine Hodgdon, Adrian V. Lee, Joan Mancuso, Julia Maues, Steffi Oesterreich, Michael Papanicolaou, Katherine E. Pendleton

TL;DR
This paper introduces a program that connects cancer researchers with patient advocates to improve collaboration and research outcomes.
Contribution
The paper presents a structured model for pairing advocates and researchers at cancer conferences.
Findings
The program successfully paired 21 researchers with advocates.
Survey responses indicated largely positive experiences from participants.
The model could be replicated at other cancer conferences.
Abstract
Involving patient advocates as partners in cancer research improves research and provides favorable experiences for both the researcher and the advocate. Previous work demonstrates challenges to establishing relationships between researchers and advocates, including uncertainty about why the relationships are necessary, how to establish them, what to say, and how they should be structured. To overcome these challenges, we established the Metastatic Breast Cancer Research Conference (MBCRC) Advocate Researcher Program (MARP) at the MBCRC in 2023. We outline the approach to the program to serve as a model for others interested in performing similar activities and report findings from surveys to establish evidence about the value of these relationships. The program connected 21 pairs of researchers and advocates, and participants responded to surveys about their experience, largely…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMental Health and Patient Involvement · Social Media in Health Education · Health Policy Implementation Science
