# Co-Producing a Survey on Prospective Acceptability of Neuromodulation for Mental Health Conditions with Lived Experience Experts

**Authors:** Sue Fen Tan, Paul Briley

PMC · DOI: 10.1192/bjo.2025.10239 · 2025-06-20

## TL;DR

This paper describes the co-creation of a survey with people who have mental health experience to assess how acceptable they find neuromodulation treatments like TMS and TES.

## Contribution

The study introduces a co-produced survey tool with lived experience experts to evaluate the prospective acceptability of neuromodulation techniques for mental health.

## Key findings

- The survey was refined through three rounds of feedback to improve clarity and engagement.
- Information videos and leaflets were created to explain neuromodulation techniques to potential users.
- Both online and paper versions of the survey were developed to ensure accessibility.

## Abstract

Aims: Non-invasive brain stimulation (“neuromodulation”) techniques, including transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) and transcranial electrical stimulation (TES), are used to modulate brain excitability and connectivity. TMS is approved for treating depression in the United Kingdom and preliminary evidence suggests that combining TMS and TES may enhance therapeutic effects. While neuromodulation is generally well-tolerated in research settings, its acceptability among the broader patient population remains unclear due to limited exposure, awareness, and information accessibility. Understanding prospective acceptability, defined as the perceived appropriateness of an intervention before its application, is crucial for improving treatment uptake and addressing concerns about safety and feasibility. We aimed to co-produce a survey with lived experience experts to assess the acceptability of individual and combined neuromodulation techniques among potential service users.

Methods: The study was co-developed with our Neuromodulation Experts-by-experience Advisory patient and public involvement (PPI) group. We underwent three rounds of iterative feedback to refine the survey focus, structure, and questions. A scoping review of existing literature on prospective acceptability of neuromodulation techniques informed the content, alongside the Theoretical Framework of Acceptability. Given the novelty of combined (TMS+TES) neuromodulation, no prior informational materials exist. PPI members advised it was critical to produce accompanying videos and leaflets to briefly illustrate the different neuromodulation techniques. The video scripts and leaflet content were produced in collaboration with three PPI members who tried the neuromodulation techniques, to avoid rehearsed scripts and ensure honest reviews of the techniques.

Results: The final survey version was adapted to maximise clarity of questions, engagement, and completion rates. The survey incorporated questions on awareness, perceived effectiveness, ethical considerations, and practical burden of different neuromodulation techniques. Online and paper versions of the survey were created to ensure accessibility. We successfully produced three information videos within 90-second target duration featuring PPI members and lead researchers. We developed a supplementary infographic leaflet for enhanced comprehension and accessibility.

Conclusion: Engaging stakeholders through PPI was instrumental in developing the survey to ensure accessibility and relevance for diverse participants with lived experience of mental health conditions. End-user involvement in the design process improved survey comprehensibility, highlighting the importance of co-production in developing effective research tools. Findings from this survey will provide insights into the acceptability of novel neuromodulation techniques, ultimately informing future clinical implementation and patient-centred research strategies.

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12242197