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Dr Ruth Naughton-Doe, Postdoctoral Research Fellow, School for Business & Society

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  1. I have a project website with an active blog where I post regular updates about progress, research activities and early findings. I advertise this blog through my project X/Twitter @pn_loneliness, through business cards and networking.
  2. 2. I am undertaking a rapid scoping review of interventions for perinatal loneliness, and I have been transparent by publishing my intended methodology in an open access preprint on Figshare. I could have opted to publish this in a peer-reviewed journal, but publishing quickly and open access has led to helpful engagement with the paper. Since being uploaded in March 2023, my preprint has been viewed 427 times and downloaded 39 times (January 2024 stats). I have received emails from four academics offering some suggestions for improving the research.
  3. 3.I have two research advisory groups for my study – one composed of professionals who support parents (22 members), and one composed of people with lived experience (ten members). I encourage and invite them to provide their perspectives on my research design and tools. The lived experience group is very diverse and includes people from different religions, cultures, ethnicities, sexualities, and genders.
    It was very time consuming to recruit these groups and the administration involved in managing multiple meetings and 32 volunteers was difficult. I also received mentorship from the McPin Foundation (a lived-experience research organisation) on how to recruit, convene and facilitate the groups as this requires a lot of thought and skill, particularly if people have conflicting opinions. It could also be uncomfortable to open myself up to criticism and feedback, and conversations could often be challenging.
    However, the discussions were fascinating and have helped me improve my study and consider aspects I had never considered. Involving a wide range of people with diverse lived experience helped me to anticipate issues and ask more sensitive questions. For example, Dads commented that some of the questions would need to be reworded to be more inclusive of dads’ experiences, and others commented that people might be afraid to take part in the research for fear a white middle class academic might not understand their unique lived experience.Perinatal Loneliness Research Group.
  4. I have set up a research group for academics interested in perinatal loneliness and I currently have 23 people signed up. We have met up twice and are now working on a joint-paper summarising what we know about perinatal loneliness and setting out future priorities for research. I have reached out to share my research and learn from others and I am now working on a research review with academics interested in the impacts of walking with young children.
  5. Outreach in the community to gain feedback on findings.

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Except where otherwise noted copyright in this work belongs to the author(s), licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International Licence 

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