“…This workshop aimed at “increasing awareness of consumer and community involvement; changing attitudes to future implementation of involvement activities and influencing behavior in the methods of involvement used.” The workshop covered fundamentals of consumer and community involvement: why it is important, benefits of and barriers to involvement, ethical considerations and methods of implementation, in particular the need to find “suitable people.” After attending the workshop, the number of participants who found PPI very relevant had doubled, and almost all confirmed that the workshop had increased their understanding of PPI. Qualitative research among UK trialists and patient representatives involved in trial steering committees found less enthusiasm for the need to train researchers, in particular from the perspective of patient research partners, who felt that researchers “already possessed the skills needed.” Although some researchers questioned the evidence base for training researchers, they did identify a need for guidance on how and when to involve patient representatives and in particular the challenge of finding “suitable people.” The study concluded by suggesting that alternative types of education, such as coaching, were suitable to learning about PPI, maybe even together with patient representatives, to learn from each other. It also encouraged further efforts to conceptualize, design and deliver PPI training to researchers, to convince them of its relevance and support uptake.…”