THIS WEBSITE IS CURRENTLY IN THE DEVELOPMENT STAGES. MORE TO COME SOON!
Committed to reducing adverse pregnancy outcomes attributable to ethnic inequalities
Why is this important?
MBRRACE-UK, a national programme which highlights causes of maternal and infant death, reports that women from ethnic minority groups are at a disproportionately higher risk of adverse pregnancy outcomes compared to White women, both for the mother and baby.
There are multiple reasons why this may occur but there is little research explaining the mechanisms or interventions to improve them. There is a clear need to determine research questions and priorities in this high-priority field to guide the future research agenda with the aim of reducing the excess adverse outcomes attributable to ethnic inequalities.
Our Mission
The REPAIR Priority Setting Partnership (PSP) was set by a multidisciplinary group composed of healthcare professionals, researchers and the public which aims to reduce adverse outcomes in pregnancy attributable to ethnic inequalities via research identification and prioritisation. The methodology is adapted from the well-established James Lind Alliance procedure and involves gathering evidence uncertainties through two online surveys and a final workshop to prioritise research questions identified.
What do we require?
Lots of participation and engagement from healthcare professionals, patients or carers of patients with lived experience or expertise in the topic of racial and ethnic inequalities in pregnancy outcome. We will be posting a survey which will be found on the 'Get Involved' link below. We then will post the second round of the survey approximately 1-2 months after. We want to reach as many individuals as possible to gather as many research gaps as we can so please disseminate this website among your contacts and complete the surveys to make our mission possible!
Interested in being involved or would like to hear more? Please click on the pages below to find out more!
CONTACT US
If you have any queries about the project please get in contact with us