
Dr Emma Harris
Senior Research Fellow In Applied Health Research
Biography
Professional biography
Emma is a Senior Research Fellow in Applied Health Research in the School of Health, Wellbeing and Social Care and co-lead of the Nursing Research Group. She is the Faculty of WELS Impact and Engagement lead for Nursing and Allied Health Professions for REF 2029.
Emma is Joint Lead of a National Institue for Health and Care Research (NIHR) funded project: Feasibility, Practicality and Acceptability of a Patient Decision Aid (CONNECT) to Improve SharedDecision-Making for Planned Coronary Angioplasty.
Career History
- 2024-present: Senior Research Fellow in Applied Health Research, Open University
- 2023-2024: Research Fellow in Applied Health Research, Open University
- 2016-2023: Research Fellow in Patient Education and Communication, University of Huddersfield
- 2014-2016: Post-doctoral Research Fellow, University of Leeds
Qualifications
- PhD, Exercise Physiology (Thesis: Vascular health and repair in women across the lifespan: effect of exercise), University of Leeds (2013)
- BSc (First Class Hons), Sports Science and Physiology University of Leeds (2009)
Research interests
Emma has experience of research across different disciplines, having transitioned from quantitative and basic science research in exercise sciences, to qualitative research in applied health research. Her current research interests centre on the theme of improving shared decision-making and patient communication.
A full list of publications can be accessed here Emma Harris (0000-0002-7649-9763) - ORCID and Emma Harris - Google Scholar. Web of Science Researcher ID is AAJ-8194-2020: Harris, Emma - Web of Science Core Collection.
Teaching interests
Supervision of Research Degree Students:
One successful PhD completion as co-supervisor, and currently supervising one PhD student (external) on the communication of benefits and harms for planned coronary angioplasty, which is an invasive heart procedure.
Impact and engagement
Emma co-leads an Open Societal Challenge: Improving health professional-patient communication and shared decision-making in international cardiology services.
External collaborations
External examining:
2023-present Imperial College London (National Heart and Lung Institute), Postgraduate taught MSc, PG Dip, PG Cert Cardiovascular and Respiratory Healthcare.
Projects
Feasibility, Practicality and Acceptability of a Patient Decision Aid (CONNECT) to Improve Shared Decision-Making for Planned Coronary Angioplasty
Background: Questionnaires sent to over 70,000 NHS patients in 2020 show that people do not feel fully involved in making decisions about their healthcare. Patients should be at the centre of decision-making about their treatments, but often they are not. Patients with angina (chest pain/discomfort), are one group that face a tricky decision. They are already treated with medications but may have the option of planned coronary angioplasty treatment as well. This treatment may improve their chest pain/discomfort but has more serious complications than treatment with medicines alone. So, patients should fully understand their options, so they can make a decision that is right for them. Earlier work we have done showed that almost half of patients treated with planned coronary angioplasty are not fully involved in decision-making, do not understand the information they are given, and misunderstood the risks and benefits of coronary angioplasty treatment. Something we want to change. Patient decision aids (PtDAs) are more than just educational ‘tools’. When used by patients and health professionals they improve the ‘quality’ of: 1) The decisions made, and 2) The decision-making process. There are no good quality UK 'coronary angioplasty' PtDAs available. So, we co-created a web-based one, called ‘CONNECT’ which shows 'promise'. Aim: We want to test CONNECT, in a larger study (trial), to see if it improves the quality of shared decision-making. But trials are expensive, so we need to do some groundwork first to know what works best. In this preliminary fact-finding study, run over 24-months, we will ask 8 NHS Cardiac Centres, and 320 of their angina patients, about what approaches will work best to run a future trial and how they felt about being involved in the study. Design/methods: We will evaluate 1) our plans for the future trial design; and 2) the acceptability and practicality of CONNECT to users. We will collect information (using forms, questionnaires and interviews), to understand who will take part and whether enough people and Cardiac Centres agree to try CONNECT. We will also see if our plan for the future trial will work, whether patients and NHS staff like CONNECT, and how it might fit within NHS cardiology services. Patient and Public Involvement (PPI): We have worked with 121 expert patients and 65 health professionals, over a 2-year period, to understand their priorities and help us to co-create CONNECT to meet their needs. An expert patient/co-applicant and an experienced PPI lead will coordinate involvement throughout our study. Dissemination: To get our research ‘out there’ to benefit others, we will share findings through our established international network of expert patients and health professionals to influence policy and practice. We will publish and present findings and run a national conference.
Publications
Journal Article
Shared decision-making in minority ethnic groups: an umbrella review (2024)
Presentation / Conference
Shared decision-making in minority ethnic groups: an umbrella review (2024)