Co-creating a social science research agenda for Long Covid
Oonagh Cousins, Maaret Jokela-Pansini, Nisreen A. Alwan, Ella Barnard, Jo Dainow, Caroline Dalton, Gail Davies, Mark A. Faghy, Eileen Gilmour, Ian Patel, Ondine Sherwood, Lotus Westerhof, Beth Greenhough

TL;DR
This paper outlines a collaborative approach to identify key social science research priorities for Long Covid based on input from various stakeholders.
Contribution
The study presents a novel method for co-creating a research agenda with diverse Long Covid stakeholders, emphasizing social science priorities.
Findings
Nine key research questions were identified, covering treatments, mental health, and socioeconomic impacts.
Involving diverse stakeholders revealed both familiar and novel themes in Long Covid research.
The collaborative approach highlighted the importance of patient and professional input in shaping research priorities.
Abstract
Our objective was to understand how social scientific research could best address the needs and concerns of patients, families, carers, healthcare professionals, academics, private and public sector professionals, and volunteers from Long Covid charities and support groups and people with lived experience of Long Covid. We worked with different stakeholders to develop a list of research priorities that particularly focused on social science as this is where our collective expertise lies, but similar methods could also be used to set research priorities in the natural sciences, medicine or the humanities. We used purposive sampling and conducted two online surveys. The first online survey (N = 57) asked participants to identify their top five questions of concern, which resulted in a list of 253 questions. These questions were then consolidated, refined and edited down to 55 questions,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsLong-Term Effects of COVID-19 · COVID-19 and Mental Health · COVID-19 impact on air quality
