Start by listening: the key to impactful healthcare research

#CelebratingEngagement
with Anna Lawrence-Jones

Anna wearing her glasses and smiling into the camera with a pastel pink, turquoise, white and orange striped wall in the background.

Start by listening: the key to impactful healthcare research

#CelebratingEngagement
with Anna Lawrence-Jones

Anna wearing her glasses and smiling into the camera with a pastel pink, turquoise, white and orange striped wall in the background.

鈥淚t鈥檚 about supporting people to ensure that they feel heard and listened to, which they always should have been, but historically haven鈥檛.鈥

Anna received the Leadership Award in the 2025 President鈥檚 Awards for Excellence in Societal Engagement for her commitment to meaningful public involvement in research.

The incredible projects Anna has delivered as Public Involvement Lead at the Institute of Global Health Innovation is testament to her natural ability to foster relationships with patients, carers and community members from diverse backgrounds.

 鈥淪ome of the most insightful things I鈥檝e learned, and the most enjoyable parts of my career, have come from conversations with patients and members of the public.鈥

Anna explains that engagement should focus on building and maintaining long-term relationships, and she shares a professional example that has had a lasting impact. 鈥淒uring the Hearing Birdsong project, I formed a strong friendship with an inspirational woman called Jean. Jean is in her 80s and has hearing loss. She taught me how to make our events more accessible and what we can all do to communicate better with each other. Seven years since the project began, Jean and I are still in touch and have been to each other鈥檚 homes and met each other鈥檚 children!鈥 smiles Anna.

Anna wearing a white coat and smiling looking over the photographers right shoulder with the brown-brick St May's Hospital arch in the background

Partnership from start to finish

Hearing Birdsong brought together designers, researchers, engineers, people with hearing loss and audiologists to co-produce an installation of bird boxes that played bird song. The bird boxes were designed to produce the same frequencies as a traditional hearing test, forming an installation that encouraged the public to listen and screen their hearing. 鈥淚t's a really good example of bringing together art, science and public engagement into something that can make a difference鈥 said Anna.

Anna has also collaborated with 911今日黑料 College Healthcare NHS Trust on a study that looked at why patients, particularly those at higher risk of inequitable healthcare, do not attend hospital appointments. 鈥淚 involved people from  minoritised ethnic groups or living in deprived areas to co-produce interventions that supported these groups to attend hospital appointments.鈥

Designers and behavioural researchers led a trial to compare the interventions, and a poster was co-designed with the public to highlight the barriers people face in attending appointments. 鈥淭his was shared with staff alongside tips to support people, which has raised awareness and led to further Trust-wide initiatives to address these barriers.鈥

Anna sitting down at a table holding the lid of a yellow bird box and peering inside, wooden letters spelling HELIX are sitting on a window sill in the background.
Anna sitting on a table with four yellow bird boxes laid out around her, wooden letters spelling HELIX are sitting on a window sill in the background.

Inclusion without exception

Amongst all her projects, there is a clear emphasis on inclusivity. Why is this important to Anna? 鈥淚t feels funny to say [diversity and inclusion] is a passion. I think it should just be that everyone thinks it鈥檚 important." 

鈥淗istorically, researchers have called certain groups 鈥榟ard to reach鈥 when they are not, we were clearly just not engaging with them in the right way.鈥

鈥淧eople from minoritised groups are most likely to experience health inequity. So, if we're not involving groups from diverse backgrounds then we're not going to be developing services or products that are meeting their needs.鈥 To Anna, leading inclusive and diverse initiatives is a necessity in health research, and one that the scientific world and society benefits from. 

She also highlights that engagement must be reciprocal and benefit everyone involved. 鈥淢ake sure you're closing the loop and letting the community know what has changed 鈥 鈥榶ou told us this, we did this鈥欌 said Anna. 鈥淵ou should not only capture how involving the public has impacted the research but also reflect with the researchers and community members on what they have gained and what could be improved.鈥

Anna with her hands on her hips smiling while looking to the left of the camera, standing in front of the developing Fleming Centre near the canals behind St Mary's Hospital.

The pathway to leadership

Despite her expertise in the field, Anna has not always worked in public involvement. After completing a science degree, she discovered societal engagement during a graduate scheme at the Wellcome Trust, sparked by lunchtime visits to the Wellcome Collection. Her interest in public involvement grew at Cancer Research UK, where she saw firsthand that research proposals were stronger鈥攁nd more successful in funding applications鈥攚hen patients were involved. 鈥淭hat is when I realised - oh, this is valuable. I then decided I wanted to work in public involvement and engagement.鈥

Looking forward, Anna shared her excitement about returning to work from maternity leave and her plans to continue developing creative and innovative involvement practices with input from other sectors. She is particularly looking forward to working with the team to shape engagement at the new Fleming Centre, set to open by the canal next to St Mary鈥檚 Hospital by 2028.

She points us towards the , reminding us that 鈥測ou don鈥檛 have to start from scratch.鈥

Anna鈥檚 parting piece of advice is simple and reassuring: 鈥淒on't be scared of involving the public. It's just about conversations.鈥

Anna smiling into the distance over the photographers left shoulder while leaning against a white, turquoise, pink and orange striped wall.