Barbara

Barbara is a research nurse and trial coordinator, and has been working in research for 18 years. She is planning to retire in a few months and is in the process of preparing to hand over her roles for ongoing studies.

Barbara is a research nurse and trial coordinator in a university department, and has been working in research for 18 years. Alongside this, and up until last year, she also had a part-time job in a commercially-owned research facility; this provided some financial stability, compared to the fixed-term university contracts, and helped her maintain clinical skills. Before starting in research, Barbara worked for 14 years firstly as a nurse and then, after retraining, as a midwife. Whilst she was working clinically, Barbara was involved in a small study on hepatitis C. She had enjoyed this experience and decided to pursue research as a way to progress professionally. In her first post, Barbara worked as a research midwife on a study about pre-eclampsia and hypertension in pregnancy. When that study came to an end, she took a post in research nursing. Since then, Barbara has been involved in a range of studies, mostly around women’s health and genetics, with a focus on oncology. Over time, Barbara has taken on a trial coordination role whereby she liaises with various individuals and services/organisations to set up and run studies. When there are inefficient procedures or difficulties in a study, Barbara has found it helpful speaking with colleagues around the country to identify possible solutions.

Before she started in her first research post, Barbara spoke to a colleague who was already working in the area. This was helpful but it was still a learning curve and she had no experience of research regulation. However, strong supervision and a research training course helped. The move into research meant other adjustments for Barbara too. She found the pace of work different, especially when she first started and before the workload picked up; whereas before she had been in a very active role, she found she had to learn to manage her time differently in research. Barbara faced some negative attitudes from clinical colleagues when she first started in post, who believed researchers treated patients as guinea pigs for their own interests, but she feels that people now are more accepting of the value of research.

Barbara feels her nursing and midwifery backgrounds have been beneficial in a research environment. She identifies with having a tolerant, compassionate and understanding attitude towards patients, and feels strongly about putting them at the forefront of her work. However, she also found that research changes this relationship in some ways: finding that balance, recognising that you have to give up a bit of the [‚] patient side of things. Barbara was involved in setting up a clinic for women at risk of cancer when a study highlighted the need for this to be available: that’s been a way of satisfying my patient/nurse interaction aspect which is oftentimes something missing from other research roles.

Barbara’s research delivery roles have involved recruiting participants on wards and through consultants. Before taking consent, Barbara ensures that participants understand what the research involves and that they may receive limited direct benefit from taking part. One challenge Barbara faces in her role is explaining concepts such as randomisation’ to potential participants. She has sought advice from different consultants on how to do this, and emphasises the importance of presenting studies in a way that is unbiased and accurate. Difficulties can arise when working with participants who are non-native speakers and Barbara has sometimes used a language interpretation service to manage this. Barbara is also involved in collecting the data for studies from conducting questionnaires to taking blood samples and swabs. She has not been involved in data analysis or dissemination and doesn’t anticipate this being something she does in the future: it’s come too late in my career to take that on now.

Barbara is planning to retire in a few months. In preparation and for a more gradual adjustment, she finished her part-time job in the commercial research facility last year. In her ongoing post, she is in the process of trying to bring everything up into nice, neat bundles for those taking over her research nurse and trial coordination roles. Reflecting back on her experiences, Barbara is glad she opted for a research way of moving up in my career, rather than a management one as she thinks this allowed her to work more clearly towards the aim of empowering people at the core of nursing and midwifery. She encourages nurses and midwives who enjoys the intellectual side of things to pursue a research path. To those new in the role, she emphasises that it is important to ask questions and hold up your hand if something is unclear.

Barbara was due to retire shortly. She pursued a research career as she felt it offered valuable opportunities to empower and support patients, whereas managerial career pathways would likely have more constraints.

Age at interview 64

Gender Female

For Barbara, being a research nurse is about helping to improve the situation for patients. She emphasised that carrying out research activities accurately was vital.

Age at interview 64

Gender Female

Barbara was in a combined research nurse and study co-ordinator post. She gained insights from each role which held relevance to the other.

Age at interview 64

Gender Female

When Barbara took a post as a research midwife, the length of contract was a worry. However, moving away from shifts gave her more family time. She also took on a part-time commercial research job to boost her income.

Age at interview 64

Gender Female