Pharmacy researchers investigating drug optimisation for severe mental illness hold workshop for people with lived experience

Apr 18, 2023

3 min

Dr Ian Maidment



  • Members of the Lived Experience Stakeholder Group meet at Aston University for the first time to give feedback on the project
  • MEDIATE investigated how medication for severe mental illness can be optimised
  • Research funded by the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR).


Researchers from Aston Pharmacy School welcomed people with lived experience involved in the MEDIATE research project to campus for a one-day workshop on 17 March to enable these members of the Lived Experience Stakeholder Group - who all live with and take medication for severe mental illness (SMI) - to meet in person to give feedback and discuss their participation in the project.


The group members have participated in the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) funded project since January 2022 until its conclusion in March 2023.

The MEDIATE project investigated how medication can be best optimised (safely getting the right drug at the right dose to the individual at the right time) for people living with SMI.


The first part of the workshop allowed participants to discuss with the research team their involvement as people with lived experience of severe mental illness in the project.


Dr Jo Howe, MEDIATE project researcher at Aston University, said:

“Although this group was formed to help us as researchers, we became aware that involvement in the group has also helped group members. They enjoyed linking with their peers, despite having had different lives and journeys, they discovered shared experiences, which helped them feel less isolated.


“Importantly some members said that their involvement in our research improved their self-confidence and helped them to speak about their medication concerns with their healthcare team.”


The second part of the workshop bought the group together to gauge opinions on three separate research projects currently being planned by the MEDIATE research team. The group were able to give useful insights to help shape the research teams future project proposals.


Max Carlish, MEDIATE group member, said: “Our participation throughout this project has really made us feel that we have been influencing the direction of the research. With our unique service user perspectives helping to make the research findings practicable and applicable to the vitally important - and often overlooked - area of medication optimisation.”


Mustak Mirza, MEDIATE group member, added: “People will trust their leaders when the leaders do the thing that make them feel psychologically safe. And I believe and feel you (the MEDIATE Team) have done that. Many thanks for being so kind.”


Dr Jo Howe added: “Input from the group has been invaluable for this project. Their involvement has shaped the trajectory of our research and they have been instrumental in identifying gaps in the research evidence.


“It really was fantastic to meet everyone in person, I felt like we connected at a deeper level and I’m really looking forward to working with everyone again on future research.”


Professor Ian Maidment, MEDIATE project lead at Aston University, said:

“It is vital that the people who this research affects are actively involved in the process. We aimed to do this in MEDIATE and working with this group has really helped inform the research. For example, any guidance or outputs we produce will be centred on real world experience and are therefore much more likely to have an impact.”



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Dr Ian Maidment

Dr Ian Maidment

Professor in Clinical Pharmacy

Professor Maidment has a focus on the use of medication in day-to-day practice.

Medication OptimisationMental HealthCommunity PharmacyRealist Research MethodsDementia
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