In both clinical trials and guideline development panels, the term “engagement” refers to how individuals are involved in the process—but the nature and purpose of engagement differ significantly between participants and patient advisors (or partners).
🔹 Clinical Trial Participants
- Definition: Individuals who take part in a clinical trial as research subjects. Their primary role is to follow the study protocol (e.g., receive an intervention, complete assessments).
- Type of Engagement: Procedural and passive.
- Purpose: To provide data that informs scientific and clinical outcomes.
- Training Required:
❌ No formal training in research is required.
Participants receive instructions specific to their role, but they do not contribute to the design, interpretation, or governance of the research.
🔹 Guideline Development Panel Public Representatives (without advisor training)
- Definition: Sometimes referred to as “public members” or “lay representatives,” these individuals may be included to represent the general public or patient voice in a limited or symbolic way.
- Type of Engagement: Often passive or underutilized.
- Purpose: To satisfy requirements for public representation, though not always structured for meaningful influence.
- Training Required:
⚠️ Often limited or not provided.
Without proper training or role clarity, these representatives may not be empowered to meaningfully contribute.
🔹 Patient Advisors / Patient Partners (in both clinical trials and guideline panels)
- Definition: Individuals with lived experience of a health condition who are engaged as collaborators across the research or guideline development process—not as subjects.
- Type of Engagement: Active, consultative, and sustained.
- Purpose: To ensure the research or guideline reflects what truly matters to patients—including outcomes, language, feasibility, equity, and dissemination strategies.
- Training Required:
✅ Yes, training is essential.
Advisors may need orientation and support to:- Understand research and guideline processes (e.g., evidence grading, consensus methods).
- Clarify roles and expectations.
- Learn effective communication and collaboration with technical stakeholders.
- Address power imbalances and promote shared decision-making.
✅ Why Training Matters for Patient Advisors
Whether contributing to a clinical trial design or helping shape evidence-based guidelines, patient advisors play a vital role in ensuring the work is meaningful, inclusive, and patient-centered. Training builds the knowledge, confidence, and skills needed for:
- Effective partnership with researchers or clinicians
- Critical review and input on complex information
- Representation of diverse patient perspectives
- Co-creation of tools and strategies for implementation

